The little things that they do
#1
Posted 2013-April-24, 08:33
Recently I was playing a match and my RHO opponent had his scorecard, on which he was recording the opening leads, open right in front of him. I asked him if he could fold it if he was going to write down the leads. The next hand he turned the card over after recording the lead, but he did not do so for any of the rest of the half-match that he played against me. I felt that calling the director would be making too much of the matter, but I played ten boards very unhappy.
Last night in a duplicate I faced one of those people who think they are clever by attempting to anticipate what declarer is going to play next and detaching their card in advance. Perhaps the UI involved is subtle, but it definitely exists, especially when declarer does something different and the card has to be restored to the hand.
I am wondering what other little things people put up with, normally without calling the director?
#2
Posted 2013-April-24, 08:57
#3
Posted 2013-April-24, 09:05
But the worst of all are really those who play most of their cards normally but when they want to give a "very important" signal will play the card halfway across the table making "this is important" eye contact with their partner. Strangely you see this kind of thing more in League bridge (supposedly serious) than at the club. Perhaps it is the lack of an on-site TD.
Actually that is not quite true. The worst are actually the TDs that give bad rulings to appease the regulars.
#4
Posted 2013-April-24, 09:19
"I'll have the...."
By Declarer, throughout the entire 13 tricks.
Edit: I actually don't mind it the first time I face an unknown opponent, because it is a solid clue about their level. After that, it gets old.
This post has been edited by aguahombre: 2013-April-24, 09:23
#5
Posted 2013-April-24, 09:20
A recent example that did end in a director call: Defenders explained to the director that they couldn't agree to the claim without seeing declarer's hand. Declarer asked why the defenders were incapable of counting the hand. Dummy accused the defenders of time-wasting. The director acceded to the defenders' request but declarer still insisted on waving his hand about, instead of placing it face up on the table.
#6
Posted 2013-April-24, 09:38
aguahombre, on 2013-April-24, 09:19, said:
"I'll have the...."
By Declarer, throughout the entire 13 tricks.
Edit: I actually don't mind it the first time I face an unknown opponent, because it is a solid clue about their level. After that, it gets old.
This is a little different to my examples, because there is no "bridge" effect. But if we want to talk about annoying things, I can't stand it when people a) snap their cards; b) hold their card vertically with one finger and then let it drop to the table.
I don't think that these are as bad as declarer saying just "play" when calling a card from dummy.
#7
Posted 2013-April-24, 09:40
WellSpyder, on 2013-April-24, 08:57, said:
No, I didn't ask it well; I am interested in this sort of thing resulting in director calls too.
#8
Posted 2013-April-24, 09:44
#10
Posted 2013-April-24, 09:53
nige1, on 2013-April-24, 09:20, said:
Once it has got to this point, the defenders have in effect declined to accede to the claim, and the director should adjudicate it. Realising the consequences of having claims adjudicated, especially if as seems likely there was a rather abbreviated claim statment, I think this would soon put a stop to such arrogant behaviour by the claimers.
#11
Posted 2013-April-24, 09:56
MickyB, on 2013-April-24, 09:47, said:
Synonymous until the opponent ---mesmerized by "play" used over and over again -- doesn't notice that you slowly added "the Ace"; and/or dummy being equally mesmerized pulls a low card which you didn't intend.
There might be a good reason why "play" is not one of the words mentioned when the rules address informal designations of cards by declarer.
#12
Posted 2013-April-24, 10:04
MickyB, on 2013-April-24, 09:47, said:
Didn't we have a long thread a few months ago specifically about the legality of "play"? It's not one of the incomplete designations whose meaning is specified in 46B. The question is whether it should be considered equivalent to "small" or "play anything".
#13
Posted 2013-April-24, 10:08
MickyB, on 2013-April-24, 09:44, said:
Thanks for the warning! I'd better look carefully in future....
#14
Posted 2013-April-24, 10:17
MickyB, on 2013-April-24, 09:47, said:
I object just because I find it annoying. It is weird, too -- of course dummy is going to "play"; the question is "what?". "Small" adequately answers this question.
I once played a session with an American friend who had this mannerism. Every time he said "play" I asked "which one?". He soon stopped doing it. If he hadn't, it would have driven me spare.
#15
Posted 2013-April-24, 10:20
MickyB, on 2013-April-24, 09:44, said:
How can having just one card underlined/circled possibly be more confusing than having one card circled and one underlined and trying to work out which it the lead the opponents actually use? Perhaps I've misunderstood.
#16
Posted 2013-April-24, 10:27
broze, on 2013-April-24, 10:20, said:
If you glance at the card and just see lots of underlines, you can easily assume that all their leads are standard. You'd have to look more carefully to notice that the underlines are under the "wrong" cards.
#17
Posted 2013-April-24, 10:30
barmar, on 2013-April-24, 10:27, said:
Ok - I kind of see. In any case the EBU card has a solution! Above the leads section is a box which you colour in if using non-standard leads. Hence no room for misunderstanding or false assumption.
#18
Posted 2013-April-24, 10:40
broze, on 2013-April-24, 10:30, said:
You still have to hunt for the ones that are different, and could easily miss one. Using a different way of highlighting your non-standard leads avoids this difficulty. This is the information the opponents most need, it should stand out.
#19
Posted 2013-April-24, 10:55
barmar, on 2013-April-24, 10:40, said:
Yes, this. Say oppo are playing standard leads, except they don't treat the ten as an honour. If they've circled the 2nd highest card in each Txx(x)(x) combination, it takes about one second to understand their methods. If they've moved the underlines, I need to check every combination listed to see if the card marked is different from standard.
#20
Posted 2013-April-24, 10:59
barmar, on 2013-April-24, 10:04, said:
Ok, fair enough, I missed that thread. I was under the impression that it was clearly equivalent to "small" and would've guessed it was mentioned in the laws as such.