nige1, on 2017-December-08, 05:28, said:
Another case of the ACBL tail wagging the WBF lap-dog to the detriment of the game.
What the Hell does an ACBL regulation valid only in ACBL events have to do with the WBF? You're way off base here, Nigel.
barmar, on 2017-December-08, 10:07, said:
This is nice in theory, but I don't think it works so well in practice. If someone routinely instabids over jumps, is it really their "normal tempo" on the rare occasions that they hesitate, just because the regulation says you must hesitate all the time in these situations? Does the regulation trump reality?
Perhaps we should penalize the instabids more, but that's unlikely to happen. And remember, it's not an infraction to pass UI, only to use it, so we'd have to determine that their partner took advantage of knowing they didn't have anything to think about after the jump.
Rules and regulations are written, usually, with the implicit assumption that people will actually follow them. Does a regulation "trump reality"? I don't know, because I don't know what "trump reality" means. To my mind, someone who routinely instabids over jumps ought to be first educated (by the director, not his opponents - or maybe by his partner, but not at the table) and if he doesn't change his ways first warned that he must do so, and if not, penalized for failing to follow the director's instructions and for instabidding (not suggesting two separate penalties, one penalty covering both offenses).
No, passing UI is not an infraction, but it is an irregularity, and it's one that's easily avoided if you stop and think about what you're doing. IAC I'm not proposing sanctions for "passing UI" I'm proposing them for not following correct procedure. See Law 74A3.
I understand "it's just not done", but I think that's a deplorable attitude at best.