Zelandakh, on 2015-July-08, 03:23, said:
I do not think that Kickback is worthless but I do think it should be avoided by any N/B player (and most I players too). As an aside, as far as I can see no one mentioned Kickback in this thread so I am not sure who you are calling an idiot.
I was not referring to this particular thread, and I was only giving Kickback as an example of terms used by responders on this Novice / Beginner Forum. I also mentioned the Unassuming Cue Bid, and Vampyr suggested that I should probably know about it. I have only just discovered it and noone at my clubs play it, and I suspect most have never heard of it.
I play at three clubs, two social and one an EBU club where the standard is a bit higher. I have been playing bridge for two years and am probably the newest member at all three clubs. You may be surprised to know that very few players at any of the clubs know about splinters, Jacoby 2NT, Landy, Michaels, UNT, Puppet Stayman, Garbage Stayman, Unassuming Cue Bid, intermediate / weak jump overcalls, etc., though some have heard of them. Hardly anyone at the social clubs knows what a 'reverse' is, only one pair play KCB, and most have never even heard of RKCB.
I have a few books on Acol. The 'beginner' books rarely mention any of the above. I have a couple of books for improvers, including one by Michelle Brunner (Acol bidding for Improvers), and the only conventions covered are standard Blackwood, Stayman and Intermediate/Jump overcalls. She does not cover red suit transfers. Only in her more advanced book ("for budding experts") does she introduce the systems I mention above. And yet these terms come up in postings on this board. I can totally understand why they do. Often the thread subject matter widens out and experts discuss among themselves, and it's difficult to know if they have novice me in mind at the time. Occasionally someone will say "I don't think this is suitable for the NBF, which helps. I try to follow as much as I can. But someone might say '"I'd double here" and someone else will agree. It doesn't look like a type of double I recognise, so I look it up. I then ask myself "should I have known this". Before you know it I am discovering that it is a competitive double, or a supportive double, or an optional double, or a reopening double, and my brain hurts.
It's easy for you experts to recognise that some poster's suggestions are not for a novice/beginner and I should skip over them, but it's harder for me to recognise it. And who is to say what the boundary is between NBF material and IAF material?
Vampyr's suggestion was spot on, though sometimes it's hard to know when to apply it.