No justice in bridge
#1
Posted 2019-September-01, 00:16
With a sane defence in other tables we would get next to top instead of pure bottom.
#2
Posted 2019-September-01, 02:35
#3
Posted 2019-September-01, 03:09
On this board, hard to say without you posting it, but if you are the only pair in 2c, while the rest are in 3nt, you have to ask yourself why. Are you playing an anti-field system, or did you make an anti-field call? Did the opps do something weird? If you made an anti-field call, are you sure your call is actually percentage in the long run opposite the full range of what partner can have, vs what works on one particular deal?
Even though 3nt may go down 2 in theory double dummy, maybe the lead isn't clearcut, and on normal auction it isn't normal to find the winning lead.
#4
Posted 2019-September-02, 00:41
Play to enjoy the variation!
#5
Posted 2019-September-02, 02:19
#6
Posted 2019-September-02, 08:22
#7
Posted 2019-September-02, 09:04
Suppose you got your "justice" and the 5 cd club suit was on lead at most tables, e/w hands exchanged, and the field in 3nt -2 while you are in 2c-1. Imagine it from your opponent's perspective! Your side did something ridiculous, passing a forcing bid and playing a 3-2 fit, and gets a near top for doing so! They would be the ones justifiably griping about being completely fixed.
Getting to game with balanced hand opposite balanced hand, opening hand vs opening hand, but not diagnosing a particular suit weakness, is generally going to work out a lot better than playing 3-2 fits, in the long run. Leads aren't double dummy. You can be more scientific and avoid 3nt with unstopped suit on this auction (like the 4-3 heart pair) but will lose out sometimes when the field isn't bothering to do so and are unlucky that it is hard for the defense to find right lead or shift.
It's rather silly to complain about lack of justice by expecting to be rewarded for passing forcing bids and playing in the opponent's trump suit.
#8
Posted 2019-September-02, 11:45
#9
Posted 2019-September-02, 13:19
With Kind regards...
#10
Posted 2019-September-02, 19:29
#11
Posted 2019-September-02, 20:00
#12
Posted 2019-September-16, 17:04
https://www.youtube....hungPlaysBridge
#14
Posted 2019-October-14, 04:39
This is why the Reisinger is the toughest event in the ACBL calendar but has the smallest entry.
It is why the Win/Lose Swiss died when victory points were introduced, immediately making Swiss Teams far more popular: you could now lose a match narrowly and still win the event.
It is one reason why par contests hardly ever happen, although the difficulty of constructing them is also an issue.
Like most things these days, we just want justice on our own terms
#15
Posted 2019-October-14, 05:43
#16
Posted 2019-October-14, 10:31
pescetom, on 2019-October-14, 05:43, said:
East shouldn't bid 4S, but he has the right to, the way most people play. Supposedly 2nt inquiry over 2M followed by 3nt is choice of games. But direct 3nt is to play with opener barred.
#17
Posted 2019-October-19, 15:53
paulg, on 2019-October-14, 04:39, said:
Chess is a game where there is no luck and the best player wins, does no-one play chess?
A significant luck element is also a turnoff. I get disillusioned during sessions where opponents do strange or poor actions/make mistakes and get rewarded for it, whilst I get the hand of God down on me for every single mistake. I have noticed it is the poor players/novices that complain about not being able to win, and won't play on the stronger evenings, because they want the thrill of feeling they have a chance of winning, and do win occasionally, but can't be bothered to put the time and effort in to become competitive. If you want to achieve something significant, you have to put the effort in, it is very rare there is an exception to this.
#18
Posted 2019-October-20, 01:58
But the majority of bridge players tend to avoid these opportunities, with even professional sponsored teams choosing to avoid the Reisinger for lesser events; teams entering the Mini-Spingold rather than the main event. In the UK, the top weekend event is the EBU Spring Foursomes, which does not attract the 64 teams it deserves even though it gives everyone the opportunity to play the stars of the UK bridge world. And even in Scotland, we cannot attract 32 teams to the Winter Foursomes which has all the stars of Scottish bridge and some foreign stars.
We've seen the rise of bracketed knockouts in the ACBL and tiered events elsewhere. People like to win and prefer events that give them a chance, which in a sense means that most people believe that there is justice in bridge and they'd prefer to avoid it