jillybean, on 2015-January-07, 01:23, said:
If this is anyone other than a newbie, I give them a penalty for not paying attention to the game.
74 B 1. paying insufficient attention to the game.
BTW, are penalties routinely handed out in the Netherlands or do players abide by the laws?
74 B 1. paying insufficient attention to the game.
BTW, are penalties routinely handed out in the Netherlands or do players abide by the laws?
You hand out PPs to everybody who is absent minded for a second? I can just imagine the results at your MP pairs: "And the winner tonight, with the fabulous score of 35%, is..."
The Netherlands is like other countries. There are bridge clubs and "bridge" clubs. The big difference is the density of bridge clubs and the amount of bridge players. I live in an industrial town of about 60 000 inhabitants. Though the Dutch bridge population is typically not made up of factory workers (and the socialist party is very big in this town), this town has 4 bridge clubs, each with about 100 players, and these are the clubs that are associated with the Dutch Bridge League (NBB). In addition, there are probably about 20 clubs, typically with about 20 players at churches, elderly homes, factories, schools, etc. that are not associated with the NBB.
Do not call for the TD at the home for the elderly. This is a "bridge club" and PPs... well, you get the idea.
At the associated clubs, the real bridge clubs, the standards vary. But at most clubs calling the TD is normal and not frowned upon. The simple reason is that a large part of the players in these clubs play in the competitions organized by the NBB: They play interclub team games and MP pair games, organized by the NBB, once or twice a month, where there are quality TDs at the playing site and play is "by the book". If 70% of your players are used to playing by the book (which they like) then they will drag the remaining 30% of their club with them to also play by the book. That doesn't mean that they want that their TD to continuously hand out PPs to the weaker and less experienced players of the club, but they do expect the TD to educate these people and raise the standard.
I myself do not play at any of the clubs in my town (except for the occasional relaxed Summer bridge and the local, even more relaxed café drive). I play in a club that was set up to gather the best players from the region and let them play against each other. In this club, I meet the best players of these four bridge clubs from the town where I live, as well as the top players from other towns, typically from within a radius of 50 km (30 miles), an area with, I guess, 400 000 inhabitants. Obviously, at this club, for competitive bridge, there are several competent nationally certified TDs, and nobody raises an eyebrow when a TD is called. PPs are rare, since generally the Laws are followed, with the exception of the occasional silly mistake (like thinking that you are on lead and asking questions), which we typically would not penalize. Over 95% of the penalties that are handed out are time penalties, since we play 28 boards per evening and some people need to travel somewhat longer with a working day next morning, so we want the club night to run smoothly.
Rik