Rodwell Quote The Rodwell Files
#21
Posted 2011-August-10, 16:02
This can sometimes give things away a little if the key decision is T1, but more often this lets me catch my breath and consider the whole hand, what is partner's shape, what is declarer's shape, where are the high cards likely to be, and how many winners/losers do we have and do they have. I should do this all the time (and do the thinking most of the time), but if I'm playing someone I know is a fast/turbo player, I intentionally think even longer at this first trick (and likely play better as a result).
#22
Posted 2011-August-10, 17:59
paulg, on 2011-August-10, 07:15, said:
If this is true then it would seem that Eric Rodwell intended 'fast' to mean 'faster than normal'.
I believe that the USA currently hold only the World Championship For People Who Still Bid Like Your Auntie Gladys - dburn
dunno how to play 4 card majors - JLOGIC
True but I know Standard American and what better reason could I have for playing Precision? - Hideous Hog
Bidding is an estimation of probabilities SJ Simon
#23
Posted 2011-August-10, 18:08
Mbodell, on 2011-August-10, 16:02, said:
Maybe this is part of Wayne's issue - I seem to remember him arguing in another forum some years ago that players don't have the right to slow down play by not quitting a trick.
London UK
#24
Posted 2011-August-10, 18:14
gordontd, on 2011-August-10, 18:08, said:
Indeed I am not convinced that tactic is legal.
1. There is nothing in the laws that say I cannot lead to the next trick until after you have quitted your trick
2. There is an instruction saying that the trick is to be quitted "when" all four players have played to the current trick
I believe that the USA currently hold only the World Championship For People Who Still Bid Like Your Auntie Gladys - dburn
dunno how to play 4 card majors - JLOGIC
True but I know Standard American and what better reason could I have for playing Precision? - Hideous Hog
Bidding is an estimation of probabilities SJ Simon
#25
Posted 2011-August-10, 19:07
Cascade, on 2011-August-10, 18:14, said:
1. There is nothing in the laws that say I cannot lead to the next trick until after you have quitted your trick
2. There is an instruction saying that the trick is to be quitted "when" all four players have played to the current trick
The reference seems to start with 65A, which impies a trick is "completed" when all four players have played, and the players are to then turn their played cards face-down.
However, this does not seem to require immediacy. 66A allows a player who has not turned his own card to inspect the cards played to that trick by others. Maybe there is nothing requiring you to wait until all cards are "quitted" (turned) from the previous trick, but it seems the person with a faced card (whether next to play or not) must be able to halt proceedings before his side has played to the next trick, for inspection of that previous trick. Otherwise such player would not be able to excercise his inspection rights under 66A.
This track, is moving away from the original issue, however; and into ways of countering rapid play.
#26
Posted 2011-August-11, 01:45
aguahombre, on 2011-August-10, 19:07, said:
Perhaps, but I brought it up because it seems to me that the reason why Wayne is bothered by the thought of his opponents playing fast is because he doesn't think he has the means to keep the play to tempo.
London UK
#27
Posted 2011-August-11, 03:38
gordontd, on 2011-August-11, 01:45, said:
Either defender or both can control tempo at their turn to play.
I would personally never leave my card face up over after the end of the trick, unless to ask to see the cards played. But it seems clear, if only for the reasons Aguahombre gives, that it would be more trouble than it's worth to make it illegal.
#28
Posted 2011-August-11, 05:04
AlexJonson, on 2011-August-11, 03:38, said:
I would personally never leave my card face up over after the end of the trick, unless to ask to see the cards played. But it seems clear, if only for the reasons Aguahombre gives, that it would be more trouble than it's worth to make it illegal.
Players are not expected to have "photographic memory".
Any player has an obvious right to maintain his played card face up during a reasonable time for the purpose of digesting the information he can (legally) have from seeing the cards actually played.
(Maintaining a played card face up for the (sole) purpose of disconcerning an opponent or to send a coded message to his partner is of course illegal.)
#29
Posted 2011-August-11, 06:07
He's not trying to mislead the opponents by playing quickly, just putting pressure on them.
#30
Posted 2011-August-11, 06:08
Cascade, on 2011-August-10, 18:14, said:
1. There is nothing in the laws that say I cannot lead to the next trick until after you have quitted your trick
2. There is an instruction saying that the trick is to be quitted "when" all four players have played to the current trick
If I need to think, but not about the play to the current trick, then the laws don't permit me to think before playing to this trick (particularly if I have, say, a singleton) and if I turn my card I'll then have the same problem at the next trick, so I play, but leave my card face up until I've finished my thinking. If I want to think before tempo-sensitive positions I can't think of a better time to do it...
#31
Posted 2011-August-11, 08:07
barmar, on 2011-August-11, 06:07, said:
He's not trying to mislead the opponents by playing quickly, just putting pressure on them.
And opponents are in their full right to resist such pressure by adjusting their speed for their own comfort so long as they do not unjustified delay the game.
#32
Posted 2011-August-11, 09:18
Scoti, on 2011-August-10, 06:48, said:
If opponents have mentioned this several times, then it is likely that you do have a problem.
Naturally you need to think sometime, but just before you are going to make a discard with a significant meaning is the wrong time.
#33
Posted 2011-August-11, 10:27
Vampyr, on 2011-August-11, 09:18, said:
Naturally you need to think sometime, but just before you are going to make a discard with a significant meaning is the wrong time.
OTOH, players online are all completely intolerant of taking any time to think. I'm almost always the first table to finish a round at IRL clubs, but still get complaints of slow play online if I want to put any thought at all into my plays. Even when I'm declaring a tricky hand where I need to thenk.
#34
Posted 2011-August-11, 11:28
#35
Posted 2011-August-11, 11:35
Vampyr, on 2011-August-11, 09:18, said:
Or the opponents do.
If my partner served the table, or I did, and an opponent types the standard 'faster pls', I will respond with, "sorry I need to think about this". If they persist, then its "don't let the door hit you on the a$$".
If an opponent served, I'll politely say that I prefer a game where we think about the hand, instead of pushing cards. This doesn't happen often generally.
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#36
Posted 2011-August-11, 11:39
Phil, on 2011-August-11, 11:35, said:
If my partner served the table, or I did, and an opponent types the standard 'faster pls', I will respond with, "sorry I need to think about this". If they persist, then its "don't let the door hit you on the a$$".
If an opponent served, I'll politely say that I prefer a game where we think about the hand, instead of pushing cards. This doesn't happen often generally.
And when you're playing in a tourney?
Some players think that being in a speedball tourney means you can't take more than 5 seconds to think about anything, they immediately pipe up with "faster, this is speedball".
#37
Posted 2011-August-11, 11:52
barmar, on 2011-August-11, 11:39, said:
Or they just call the director, which is annoying and wastes even more time.
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#38
Posted 2011-August-11, 14:14
pran, on 2011-August-11, 05:04, said:
Any player has an obvious right to maintain his played card face up during a reasonable time for the purpose of digesting the information he can (legally) have from seeing the cards actually played.
(Maintaining a played card face up for the (sole) purpose of disconcerning an opponenttrick,or to send a coded message to his partner is of course illegal.)
Let's ignore your final point Pran, I'm not a Secretary Bird.
Imagine you used to play the game with a pack of cards and no boards to put them in. When everyone plays to a trick, declarer/defender takes them in and plays to the next trick at his pace.
I choose to play the game in the same way now - and of course you can legally play differently.
#39
Posted 2011-August-11, 15:11
AlexJonson, on 2011-August-11, 14:14, said:
Imagine you used to play the game with a pack of cards and no boards to put them in. When everyone plays to a trick, declarer/defender takes them in and plays to the next trick at his pace.
I choose to play the game in the same way now - and of course you can legally play differently.
In that case I believe the applicable laws are those for Contract Bridge where we find:
Law 66 Inspection of Tricks
Declarer or either defender may, until a member of his side has led or played to the following trick, inspect a trick and inquire what card each player has played to it. [...] (my enhancement)
Which gives even more latitude to a player who feels pressure from an opponent.
#40
Posted 2011-August-11, 16:30
mjj29, on 2011-August-11, 06:08, said:
Much as I hate to open a can of worms - I just know the next two posts - the Laws do not say any such thing. They say you may not mislead. I say "I am not thinking about this trick" and now I am not misleading so the Law does not say I cannot think.
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