Produced by ScoreBridge from www.scorebridge.com - Licensed to Christine Cooper
Thursday 31 May 07
Directed by Jean Soulier
Scored by Chris Cooper
| Pos | Players | Score % |
| 1 | Ann Burrage & Pat Jarvis | 59.72 |
| 2 = | Stuart Warne & Christine Cooper | 56.94 |
| 2 = | Peter Crowhurst & Alison Crowhurst | 56.94 |
| 4 | Marjorie Davies & Paul Dorrington | 53.47 |
| 5 | Jean Soulier & Peter Augustus | 49.31 |
| 6 | Anne Carrington & Lucy Foster | 46.53 |
| 7 | Vera Iredale & Peter Iredale | 45.83 |
| 8 | John Tomalin & Keith Langley | 44.44 |
| 9 | Tony Pickering & Gus Nelson | 36.81 |
Results produced on Friday 01 June 07 at 10:50 am
A Bidding Dilemma
I like playing bridge the way Rugby Bridge Club does it, that is why I am a member of the club. I am also on the Committee because I want to see the Club running its sessions in a way that brings maximum enjoyment to the maximum number of people. This means, however, that we do not follow the strict protocol of the EBU.
I am new to Club Bridge, Law Books and the EBU, but the way I see it, the EBU sets its Laws to police a highly competitive situation where players seek to gain financial benefit from scoring well. This requires strict Laws and a rigid interpretation. We don’t have financial benefit on a Thursday evening but we could get someone wishing to gain penalty points on a minor technicality that saw no advantage to the opposition (remember Jim on Tuesday evenings). It seems to me that the way we are playing we fall between two stools; we want a set of rules but we ignore the pre-requisites which the EBU system requires. The EBU system asks that we all produce convention cards (of course this also means that the partners should have actually read and understood what is written on the card!). If in doubt we could consult the convention card or ask the partner of the person making the bid. The dilemma arises because we do not use convention cards, so no searching of the rules will give us an answer!
What if that partner does not actually know what the bid meant?
This happened to me on Thursday. Dealer opened 2S: I asked dealer’s partner whether the bid was weak or strong, my subsequent bidding was going to depend on the strength of the 2S, she said she didn’t know, they didn’t play together very often and had not discussed the strength of their 2 bids.
My initial reaction was to simply ask dealer whether the bid was weak or strong but the view of others at the table was that this would be against EBU rules. However, if the question had gone ahead all four of us at the table would have gained equally and we could have just got on with playing the board. This may be considered “kitchen bridge” but to me it would be “sensible bridge” getting back to a friendly, hospitable style that many, or so I am told, remember from the “good old days”
Peter Augustus (views expressed are solely my own)
Anyone wishing to add to this dialog can e-mail their views to me, to be included on this blog.