jeremy69, on Jul 22 2010, 05:42 PM, said:
It is only barrack room lawyers on forums who want to assert their right to open whatever they feel like.
I'm not sure whether you are putting me in the category of barrack room lawyers, but since I have been raising this issue on and off for a while both on these forums and through an application to the EBU for a change to the regulation then there must be a reasonable chance you have me in mind in making this comment. So I would like to make two simple points in response:
1) I have absolutely no desire to be a barrack room lawyer on this or any other issue. I have only raised it at all because a very experienced pair in a serious competition who were not in the least inconvenienced by the bid, tried to get an artificial adjusted score in their favour when my partner opened 1
♣ on a 4045 15-count that he felt was of equivalent strength to a 16 point strong 1
♣, without realising that this risked contravening the regulations. I think you may be in danger of accusing the wrong partnership of being barrack room lawyers here!
2) I also have absolutely no desire to open whatever I like. I am a strong believer in regulations limiting what agreements are permitted, and indeed I think in a number of areas the current regulations in England are laxer than I think is sensible. I just happen to think that this is a specific area where the current regulations have an extremely unfortunate effect which the regulators seem determined to shut their eyes to.
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c. A change for a small minority is not in the general interest.
I agree entirely. I just don't think that applies to the issue we are discussing here. If it only affects a small minority of strong club players that is probably because the majority are inadvertently breaking the regulations without anyone realising this and without running up against opponents who would like to exact their pound of flesh if they do realise.
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(Sit back and await abuse!)
No abuse intended! I recognise it is impossible to satisfy everyone. I just don't understand the reluctance to accept that if you draw the boundary so much closer to what is normal practice in one area than in any other area of the regulations then this is likely to cause disproportionate problems and/or resentment.