respect? normal behavior?
#21
Posted 2005-September-28, 20:37
#22
Posted 2005-September-28, 21:57
Kudos to rwylee for trying to find out the right way to handle such a situation -- it shows that, intermediate or not, new TD or not, at least s/he is trying to do a good job of being a TD and cares about learning the things s/he doesn't know.
#23
Posted 2005-September-28, 22:05
I agree with you that it very much depends on the type of game. The title of this tournament was "JUST FOR FUN". Also, the opponents were not upset.
I don't agree with your analogy. Asking partner about a convention is never innocent, it will effect your action and the score. Asking the opponents who has the club king will not affect the score at all, it just speeds up the game. Even though the rules might treat these actions similarly, one of them is much more in the spirit of the game than the other.
- hrothgar
#24
Posted 2005-September-29, 02:48
Btw, there is an additional difference between online and IRL: IRL, you can't play on after a rejected claim. Therefore, there is a temtation to ask if a claim will be accepted because you don't want the TD to be called (I know this is incorrect, a.o. reasons because declarer can use the information which of the two opps rejected, but it is understandable that it happens.) Online, it can't cost to claim if you're sure it's correct so there can be no reason to ask first. Here, Han didn't know how many tricks he should claim, which explains everything.
#25
Posted 2005-September-29, 03:51
Playing online, you often have no idea who opponents are or how good they are, or whether they even know what a squeeze is.
#26
Posted 2005-September-29, 04:41
Hannie, on Sep 28 2005, 11:05 PM, said:
Online,noone has ever asked me or my partners
who holds a king,noone has ever asked if they can
claim,they just play or claim,and in my opinion that
is the spirit of the game.
I have my doubts if asking me if I have this king or
that king will speed up the game....
I would be reluctant to answer,and definitely dislike
the question
#27
Posted 2005-September-29, 08:12
#28
Posted 2005-September-29, 10:34
By sticking with my guidelines (only claim when it's obviously all winners or all less one) I still find about 20% of my claims get rejected. That dissuades me from claiming in more complicated cases. That, and the fact that I myself am unaware that I might claim in such cases.
#29
Posted 2005-September-29, 13:12
After all, there are bridge players out there who can't see a squeeze if they have just played one - the "I just played out my winners and oh my, the heart was good. Why didn't they keep the heart winner?" type.
If I'm playing against Juniors D and S, I will do the "SK with the long diamond?" and claim the appropriate after the answer. If I'm playing anybody I've seen talking to them or their table, I'll do the same thing. If I'm in a tournament, the cards go down until I see if it works or not.
I've asked "where's the DK?" before to shocked surprise that I would deign to ask (and 6 sure tricks later, I find out); I've had kibitzers be shocked by a similar question, in a game where we all knew what I was asking; I've had times when the answer was a quick "offside" and a claim.
Maybe I just assume less nasty of my opponents than I should.
Michael.
#30
Posted 2005-September-29, 13:15
rigour6, on Sep 29 2005, 10:34 AM, said:
My standard unspoken rule on these - online - is "okay, I'll play it out, you claim when you get it."
Side note: I hate "reclaim". There's a nice button on the bottom of their screens as well - they can claim when they know what's going on. I'll do it, but I'm always silently asking "why don't you, then?" Especially when "reclaim"er's partner rejects the reclaim...
Michael.
#31
Posted 2005-September-30, 08:48
This is the kind of sentence I want to be awfully sure about before I say, however.
#32
Posted 2005-September-30, 10:08
#33
Posted 2005-September-30, 10:18
G_R__E_G, on Sep 30 2005, 12:08 PM, said:
Isn't this what we do on BBO. You claim, they can see your cards, they either accept or not... if not, you play on... At some point, they will etiher give, or not.
BTW I was playing last night and dummy was good except for the a losing ♣. PArtner had denied intrest in clubs at a time where he would not have done so with the ACE.... So I told declarer to go ahead and claim with the ♣ACE... .Eight tricks later, with just an ace remaining (last trick) he claimed.
I should have claimed ZERO.... Sigh.
#34
Posted 2005-September-30, 13:13
[edit by Hannie]
- hrothgar
#35
Posted 2005-September-30, 13:40
Quote
I know it's virtually the same thing, but sometimes it's more "comfortable" to just show your cards. For example, you don't know your opponents skill level but you know what the outcome of the hand will be. Rather than force them to decide whether to accept your claim or not, you show your hand and at least if they don't surrender it helps them decide on their discards quicker.
#36 Guest_Jlall_*
Posted 2005-September-30, 13:51
#37
Posted 2005-September-30, 14:38
Quote
That works too. However, correct me if I am wrong, but I believe the ops don't know who rejected the claim. So if they are pick-up partners it might give them the wrong impression of their partner's abilities.
#38
Posted 2005-September-30, 14:42
"100% certain that many excellent players would disagree. This is far more about style/judgment than right vs. wrong." Fred
"Hysterical Raisins again - this time on the World stage, not just the ACBL" mycroft
#39
Posted 2005-September-30, 15:02
Jlall, on Sep 30 2005, 02:51 PM, said:
Ah, I've seen you do that and thought that you were just miscounting. I should have known better I guess.
- hrothgar
#40
Posted 2005-September-30, 15:28
G_R__E_G, on Sep 30 2005, 11:08 AM, said:
Deliberately facing your hand constitutes a claim.

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