A dummies guide to stanza
#1
Posted 2025-July-26, 08:47
AI Overview
In duplicate bridge, a "stanza" refers to a set of rounds played with the same board and opponents. It's a way to structure a duplicate bridge session, especially with a large number of tables, dividing the play into smaller, manageable portions. For example, a session might be divided into two stanzas, with players moving between tables within each stanza.
Could someone please explain the use and benefits of this?
"100% certain that many excellent players would disagree. This is far more about style/judgment than right vs. wrong." Fred
#2
Posted 2025-July-26, 13:27
#3
Posted 2025-July-26, 14:49
[Edit: but was completely wrong about no possible coincidence, see rest of thread]
#4
Posted 2025-July-26, 15:15
pescetom, on 2025-July-26, 14:49, said:
Stanza has a sporting definition (period / interval into which a sports event is divided).
Used in a bridge context on Wikipedia at least.
#5
Posted 2025-July-26, 15:31
smerriman, on 2025-July-26, 15:15, said:
Used in a bridge context on Wikipedia at least.
So you weren't kidding after all, it's a lunch break movement.
I never heard of this, mea culpa.
Unheard of over here, maybe a US thing.
#6
Posted 2025-July-26, 16:07
"100% certain that many excellent players would disagree. This is far more about style/judgment than right vs. wrong." Fred
#7
Posted 2025-July-26, 16:34
There are (rare) movements that run in stanzas (I've never run them, but I've seen them). The intent is "all-play-all, where that requires more than a reasonable number of boards without a break". I think there are a few in Groner, and definitely some in Jannersten.
Some movements are "stanza-like", where there is a (director-performed) large change of boards, but not necessarily with a full replacement. The Double-Weave for instance; halfway through, the boards rotate halfway across the room. I have a 6-table team movement where the first 4 rounds are done with pre-duplicated boards, and for the last round, we take the boards off 4-6 and have 1-3 share their boards with the table 3 up (shuffle, unless you have 3 copies made of 31-35; which isn't hard to do if you *know* you're running a 5x5 by round 1).
But if you see "stanza" in a movement file description, it is a movement where, somewhere in the movement, a whole bunch of boards come off and a whole bunch of boards come in.
#8
Posted 2025-July-27, 08:14
Outside NA, they are used for events that include a break to allow for discussion of boards played.
"100% certain that many excellent players would disagree. This is far more about style/judgment than right vs. wrong." Fred
#9
Posted 2025-July-27, 09:02
If it's somewhere in the middle of the movement, maybe that's a good time to have a break for lunch, in a situation where people can discuss the hands because they've all played them :-).
Now there are other solutions to this - for instance, I would run 14 rounds of a 15 table Mitchell first session into the full integrated Howell second session. But it accomplishes the same thing. It's simply "another solution".(*)
Even for my 3.5 table Howell, after 14 boards is a "good time to take a break, have some cake, smoke/bathroom/whatever. You can talk about the boards if you want, too".
I mean, if I planned a "fun bridge afternoon" at my house, with 16 people, I'd probably run the 2-stanza Howell explicitly so that I can have a break after 14 to have food and chat. Sure I could do that with 2 14-board sessions, but then I have the "N and E get to open more often" problem we have in the online GNT (where, in 5-board RR matches, N opens twice as often as anyone else. If you play an aggressive system, it is a distinct advantage to have that pair play N-S, and the more "normal" pair play E-W, no?), plus I have to either borrow two sets of 1-14 or remake the boards rather than join in the fun at the break, rather than one set of 1-28.(**)
The difference may be that Europeans are used to shorter session lengths (and possibly 3 sessions per day to get to the same 50-ish boards we play in 2), so their preferred movements are written (and scored) with stanzas-within-one-movement rather than sessions-with-individual-movements. Or history. Or - I don't know.
(*) having set up the integrated Howell, and having had to be *very careful* about the crossover to make the "sitouts play each other" work, maybe the "two stanza full movement" is better anyway...
(**) both of those issues are a function of ACBLScor, which "can't handle" (without hand-hacking the movement file - I should ask TimH about that) not starting at board 1. Doing a two-stanza movement allows me to do it "right" within the confines of my scoring programs. Graph paper and travellers (and yes, I've done that before, too)? whatever :-).
#10
Posted Today, 08:36
I am thinking of a 20-24 table game, break in the middle so we can pick out a few of the fabulous, computer dealt hands to discuss.
Are we doing 1 board rounds?
I'm doing ok with the straight around the room mitchell, bye-stand-relay, the occasional howell but I'm venturing into the unknown, not understood here.
"100% certain that many excellent players would disagree. This is far more about style/judgment than right vs. wrong." Fred
#11
Posted Today, 08:53
(yes, I know, for masterpoint reasons you can't really do this in the club. OTOH, IIRC you don't award ACBL masterpoints, so it's a "simple" matter of addition.)
If you want to run it in a stanza pattern, so that the second half does 11-20 (and you don't have to hand-add, and you can play it as a sanctioned club game), fine, but you have to make the movement(s, probably 4 or 5 of them). It's not hard, but EDMOV in ACBLscor has its "little quirks" which you absolutely need to understand, and frankly it's a "Good Judgement comes from Experience" thing; it's not something you can really learn without doing it (and screwing up).
#12
Posted Today, 08:59
I don't want to try it and screw it up in the 24 table game, maybe I'll hijack the 6-8 table game and experiment there.
"100% certain that many excellent players would disagree. This is far more about style/judgment than right vs. wrong." Fred