olien, on 2022-January-11, 20:36, said:
Not sure if you’re aware of how the ACBL directing staff is interpreting the latest bidding regulations, but it is being done in a way to regulate the psyching of natural bids.
First, even though sometimes I play the part of an ACBL TD, I never speak officially for them. ObDisclaimer out of the way...
They would say that they are regulating deviations that aren't actually "gross" enough to be a psychic. The same way they've been handling 10-12 NTs when someone deigned to open KQT8 KJT8 952 43 since 1960 or so.
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The charts also define a psych (which they have not done before) as being off by at least an ace (4 HCP) or 2 cards in length.
Actually, this is the definition:
ACBL convention charts said:
“Psych”: A call that intentionally and grossly misstates the strength and/or suit length of one’s hand.
with the following "example":
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Generally, 2 cards fewer or an Ace weaker than the minimum expected for a bid would meet the definition of a Psych, as would an Ace stronger than the maximum expected.
To me (see my forum history) that "generally" is pulling a lot of weight, but also (see BW quotes as well as here) it's been "received wisdom" in the ACBL since Dan Oakie at least. I've certainly heard it a lot in the last 20 years when the players were saying "that wasn't a psych, it was only 2 points out". However, for wide-ranging 1 suit openers (and even with Precision-style limited 1 suit openers, arguably) the "generally" is a pretty decent definition of "gross", in my opinion anyway.
What has changed is that the regulation makers are cracking down on "our preferred agreement isn't technically legal, so we'll claim any illegal action is a 'psych' to get away with it" (in cases more than the previously demonized 10-12 1NT and 6-12 weak 2s on KQT974 and out). Because frankly, that's what has been happening, for 60 years or so, and previous attempts at regulation haven't worked.
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I tried the argument that hands in that range could still be a psych if off by at least 4 HCP from the partnership agreement and was quickly told “no, it isn’t based on the partnership agreements, it is based on what is permitted. As 8 HCP is permitted, and we assume a vast majority already play light openings in 3rd seat, then they have the implied agreement to open with as few as 8 HCP in that seat, and cannot accept the argument that they’ve never done it before with this partner.”
Of course you honestly and scrupulously follow your *written* partnership agreements, which for weak third seat action is virtually unheard of in expert circles. So much so, that I'm sure your pro regular opponents have noticed this tendency, and are willing to state it on your behalf, on the record. Yes? That, they probably would accept!
If not, then it's very likely that your actual agreement "through mutual experience or awareness of the players" is such that random 7 HCP 1
♠ opener isn't in fact a "gross" deviation, therefore not-a-psych. Arguments on the legality of the "we won't allow you to deviate if that would make an illegal agreement if it wasn't a deviation" have been done to death in this thread and others.
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I was blown away because I thought the laws still prohibited RA’s from regulating natural bids,
That is not in fact the case.
Law 40B1b and c, emphasis mine said:
In its discretion the Regulating Authority may designate certain partnership understandings as ‘special partnership understandings’. A special partnership understanding is one whose meaning, in the opinion of the Regulating Authority, may not be readily understood and anticipated by a significant number of players in the tournament.
Unless the Regulating Authority decides otherwise, any call that has an artificial meaning constitutes a special partnership understanding.
The WBFLC has made it clear that the Regulating Authority has full and final decision on this. Arguments on the sanity or legality of this (and my opinion) are also easily searched for on this forum or others.
But even before that change, and the removal of the need for the Endicott Fudge ("You can play that, I guess. We don't want you to, but we can't stop you. So, you can't play any conventions after it, including conventional defences to conventional defences, even on the fourth round, even takeout doubles or Blackwood"), RAs were allowed to regulate "natural 1-level openings on hands a king lighter than average". Since I'm not sure, but I think 1997? Which for "ever", the ACBL has interpreted as "7 HCP" (and now the WBF does too). And since "forever", the following has been a requirement:
Old ACBL Convention Charts said:
DISALLOWED: []Opening one bids which by partnership agreement could show fewer than 8 HCP in first or second seat. (Not applicable to a psych.)
The only difference now is the Chartmakers explicit instruction that
New ACBL Convention Charts said:
If an Agreement would be disallowed unless it satisfies a specific High Card Point or shape requirement, a player may not use judgment to include hands with fewer High Card Points or a different shape.
It used to be that players used to be able to claim "psych" and get away with it, because there was no bright-line requirement. Because so many people did - even though "we all know it happens, we even play for it when the opponents do it" meant it wasn't "a gross deviation" of anything, and that blatant disregard of "regulations we think are stupid" was causing many many issues - they put in the bright line.
And now the directors don't have to get into "if you could play bridge, you would" arguments, they just point to a sentence and say "if you have a problem with it, take it up with the people who wrote it."
What I find amusing is that before, the standard "get out of jail free" quote was "it's not a psych, it's just a minor deviation!" Now, when players want to play something they know is technically illegal, but that Would Be Stupid, sometimes they have to try "it's not a minor deviation, it's a psych!" instead.
When I go to sea, don't fear for me, Fear For The Storm -- Birdie and the Swansong (tSCoSI)