LH2650, on Jan 27 2006, 09:22 PM, said:
luis, on Jan 26 2006, 12:35 PM, said:
Law40E doesn't say anything even remotely close to what you say.
Once more for luis:
Law 40E gives the ACBL the authority to require a convention card.
The ACBL specifies a convention card, and requires that it be filled out.
This means that agreements required by the card must actually be made.
There is a box on the card that covers doubles of preempts.
If you have not made an agreement here, you are in violation of Law 40E.
If you violate a Law, and it damages your opponents, they are entitled to a score adjustment.
Comment the first: ACBL regulations are completely irrelevant in non-ACBL events....
Comment the second: Lets assume for the moment that this incident actually occured during an ACBL event... The ACBL has a regulation on the books that requires both members of a partnership to have a completed convention card. With this said and done, in all my years of bridge I can only recall seeing this regulation enforced on two occasions. For what its worth, I just wandered by an ACBL Online tournament that was underway. Out of the 36 pairs competing, 11 had anythign which resembled a convention card.
There are deep philosophical divides in the world of bridge regarding the appropriate scope of the Laws. One of the most profound focuses on whether the Laws are intended to empower or constrain regulatory bodies. For example, many regulators in the EBU and the ACBL use Law 40D to justify an amazing variety of personal whims... In a similar fashion, if seen ACBL notables attempt to apply the following logic:
1. In order for players to use a convention/treatment, it must be documented on a convention card.
2. Players are banned from describing method XYZ on their convention card
(For what its worth, I am harshly critical when the regulatory authorities start playing these types of games. By focusing on the letter rather than the spirit of the Laws, they invite players to adopt the same code of behaviour and unleash a world of trouble)
Returning to your example: An ACBL administrator could use the convention card regulations to punish a percieved infraction in a separate and distinct area. However, given the calibre of many of the administrators I think we're better served strictly limiting their ability to impose their capricious whims on the world.