aguahombre, on Oct 16 2010, 03:56 AM, said:
Isn't all this fairly silly? It really doesn't matter if opener is offshape if it is what he/she deems to be the correct opening.
What matters is whether responder will allow for a singleton, or whether the pair has a sytem to expose it. If they don't, this is all moot.
Even if the player has done this a hundred times with this partner, it is probably not an agreement which is alertable or questionably illegal.
Whether you allow for something and whether you have an agreement are not the same. If your partner has done something 100 times then you know he is liable to and you have an implicit agreement.
Furthermore, what do you mean by not allowing for it? Suppose this player is defending, and trying to count the hand. His partner has opened 1NT 100 times with a singleton. Do you really think when he his counting th hand he will say to himself "Partner cannot possibly have a singleton so I shall exclude from my projected count all hands which contain a singleton for partner"? I don't think so!
It does not matter whether you allow for it: if you know it happens it becomes a disclosable - and possibly illegal - agreement.
aguahombre, on Oct 16 2010, 07:40 AM, said:
Wayne, I understand implicit agreements. They are firstly agreements. If partner never uses this allegedly implicit agreement for anything, it is nothing.
No. If you know that partner might do something with a particular hand because of experience, that is a disclosable agreement.
aguahombre, on Oct 16 2010, 07:40 AM, said:
If an opponent inquires about your style of NT openers, then a statement about how often a singleton has occurred might be appropriate; but that doesn't make it part of your system unless you allow for it.
Exactly: you think you ought to disclose it because it is part of your agreements.
nige1, on Oct 18 2010, 01:54 AM, said:
Many players regard them a ludicrous.
Many players regard lots of rules as ludicrous. So what? Lots of players do not.
nige1, on Oct 18 2010, 01:54 AM, said:
There is a strong incentive to break them.
Bosh. That applies to lots of rules: fortunately the world is not peopled by cheats, and as a way of deciding what the rules should be it stinks. There is a strong incentive to steal as a cheap way of getting food/money etc. Should we abolish th Laws on stealing?
nige1, on Oct 18 2010, 01:54 AM, said:
Anyway, in practice, many players ignore them.
Again, no reason to change them. Just penalise the Law-breakers.
nige1, on Oct 18 2010, 01:54 AM, said:
Some players (including directors) rationalize their breaking of such rules; but most players who break them do so because they don't know them.
True of a number of rules. Again, not a reason to change them, but a reason to educate. As for TDs, you tend to over -emphasise TDs' incompetence without evidence or justification.
nige1, on Oct 18 2010, 01:54 AM, said:
Directors seem sympathetic to rule-breakers. Unless you admit to such an agreement, the chance of being ruled against is small.
That is just rubbish.
nige1, on Oct 18 2010, 01:54 AM, said:
Partnerships who read rules like this and try to abide by them, suffer a significant long-term disadvantage, compared with those who habitually break them. Those who comply with them are derided as masochistic secretary birds. When they lose matches as a result, they can expect no sympathy from other players and directors (see previous similar topics).
That is silly. Players who follow the rules get a greater satisfaction from winning.