mgoetze, on 2012-December-29, 12:32, said:
Funny, I only fold mine twice.
Noted. Correction made to my original post.
mgoetze, on 2012-December-29, 12:32, said:
The German Bridge Federation accepts two different kinds of convention cards (depending on the event), one of which is a translated version of the WBF card. Unfortunately, the German regulations (unlike the WBF, assuming the aforementioned 76-page booklet forms part of the regulations) do not waste a single word on how these convention cards are to be completed. This makes for some incredibly badly completed convention cards, so much so that in events prescribing them I sometimes very much wish that the smaller convention card format had been allowed instead. Expecting every club player to read a 76-page booklet might be overkill, however. Also, some of it is not very international (for instance the ban on calling 2nd and 4th leads "2nd and 4th leads").
A while back, my partner and I modernized our Standard American card. One of the modernizations was that we began treating a 2 over 1 response as GF. We called our system "Modern American". We were duly informed (by an opponent, but she's also a club owner and a pretty decent director) that we were misleading people with that name, and that we
must call our system "2/1". Of course, the "2/1 Game Forcing" box right below the system name line was checked, but apparently she didn't look that far.
Didn't seem like that big a deal to me, but we changed the card. I think that if your preferred nomenclature would be confusing to your opponents, you should use something they're more likely to understand. On that note, I gather that what you would call "2nd and 4th" is what the booklet calls "second from a bad holding, fourth from an honor" rather than their preferred "second best from short, fourth from long". I don't know how "international" the latter is, but I wouldn't know what you meant by "second and fourth" in any case. <shrug>
It seems to me that the idea behind the WBF card is to provide as much disclosure as possible in the space of one "standard" (A4 or "Letter") sheet*. In contrast (again, my opinion) cards like the ACBL's are designed to provide a minimum of disclosure, and rely on "actively ethical" players to provide full disclosure verbally, if the opponents don't ask questions. I much prefer the WBF approach in principle, but a compromise somewhere in between (The EBU card?) might be preferable to either extreme.
*Plus, I must admit, an unlimited number of supplementary sheets.