Posted 2024-January-18, 10:50
I actually think that "going to where the people are, unless it causes a problem" is a better way of handling a lot of situations, and "herding cats a bunch of rich people who have basically were able to do what they wanted all their life, who 100% have two reactions(*) to being Told What To Do When It's Stupid" is one of them, especially when we're already struggling to retain players.
I'm sure the Navy works very well with "This is the way. Do it this way, no other, because I Say So" (but I also bet that line is tempered a little bit when it comes to Admiral's Sons and Military Family turned Politician's Nephew. At least that is what I hear). My experience is that Bridge players are different.
And therefore, I think "here's what you're supposed to do. We know you won't, because nobody has for the last 80 years, despite our efforts; and also 99.99% of the time everybody knows what everybody means, and that's okay; so let's codify a bunch of 'what players mean by Y' and let the Person-on-the-Floor's discretion be final for the other 1 in 50 000." is Just Fine.
I mean, my preferred legal pattern (which I've railed at for years, to about as much avail as anybody else's) would remove L46B in favour of detailed "Commentary on 45A" that basically would repeat 46B; along with annual "case review" documents, one of those cases "this year" might be "here's a new, interesting L46A violation, and here's how we want it to be ruled". I'm betting that a lot of them would look like - and some would actually be - lamford's North London Club hands.
The people who complain that the Laws are too complicated would be "happier", but they'd be confused by how to do all the rulings. The people who complain that there are too many Laws to understand would be even more upset when we tell them that they have to read both the Laws, and the Commentary to those Laws, and "oh, see this case in the 2022 review that hasn't got into the commentary yet".
My snarky opinion is, of course, that the Venn Diagram of those two groups isn't *quite* a circle, but you might need your magnifying glass. My real opinion is less snarky.
But it is what it is, and almost nobody has any serious problem with it, and even those SBs (in the legal sense, not the NLC sense) will admit that it almost always works in practise (and if your director has enough skill, confidence and support, when they make a "not incontrovertible" ruling, it's not clearly wrong, the players (grudgingly) accept it, and if they don't, the response is "we weren't at the table, the Director was, and we're trusting they got it right.") even if, theoretically, a Probst Cheat could drive a truck through it - once.
(and, in case it wasn't clear from my other posts, I agree with blackshoe about the actual ruling. It's obvious that declarer meant 'an another high club', not 'and another club')
(*) those two reactions, depending on how embedded they are in the community, are "fine. There are other things I can do with my time where I don't have to deal with Petty Jumped-up Martinets that finally got a Bit of Power" and "Hey Golf Buddy/Drinking Buddy/occasional teammate who actually does have Power, did you hear what Petty Jumped-up Martinet did *to me*?" The results of both of which I think are obvious...
When I go to sea, don't fear for me, Fear For The Storm -- Birdie and the Swansong (tSCoSI)