wank, on 2016-January-19, 03:19, said:
i psyched against a bad pair. obviously this was legal and the director told them so. later he unofficially suggested i behave myself and that psyching against clueless people was a bit low. i have heard this view expressed before.
it's not a view i share. this was a national event, albeit not a very high standard one (it was a swiss running alongside a BAM, so all the good teams were in the BAM assuming they had qualified for the final). the opps were the perennial beginner types - played for a very long time without ever progressing. but anyway, i consider psyching to be an important part of the game. yes, it's very out of fashion compared to the early days of bridge (1930s and whatnot), but I don't think bidding fashion should be a factor in deciding how i play the game.
comments?
please don't send this to the laws forum. there is no doubt my actions were legal. it's an issue of taste.
The issue of 'psyching' at the bridge table has long been a bone of contention. The ACBL,particularly has taken a dim view of it.
I quote the article about it in the ACBL Bulletin in February 1978 authored by Donald Oakie :-
"[b][ It is high time that we call all of our members' and directors attention,especially at the club level, to the fact that,
while a psychic bid is legal,its discriminate use is not. People who employ psychic bids against less experienced players may be
guilty of unsportsmanlike psyching and thereby be in violation of League regulations. People who psych against their peers may be guilty
of frivolous psyching.or of having an unannounced partnership understanding. People who psych against more experienced players will probably
get bad boards,and they may lose the few good boards they get by being judged to have indulged in unsportsmanlike psyching or to have disrupted the game.
"What does this mean to you as a player? If you want to psych any call other than a forcing call,go ahead and do it - it's perfectly legal. If you psych
on an average of once a month.no player or director is likely to say a word about it.If you can't resist the temptation to do it oftener,you are going to
fall foul of the Laws and League regulations. The excitement of using a psychic bid often exerts an almost irresistible attraction for a newcomer to
duplicate bridge. An occasional jaded 'duplicateer' will fall back on psychic bids as a means of having "fun" during a session marked by bad results
in the early rounds or where few rating points are at stake. Expert players and the large majority of experienced club and tournament players seldom or
never make a psychic bid.
" A psychic bid carries a high price tag. When employed agaianst one's peers,the chances of success are 50-50. When they fail,they can prove to be very
costly.When they succeed,in a very short time the cost in partnership confidence can far exceed any momentary advantage gained.
By its nature,a psychic bid,whether successful or not,is remembered by the opponents as well as the user's partner. A player who becomes addicted to
psychs soon becomes a 'marked' man. Psychers live in a storm's eye of gloating or infuriated opponents,harried TD's and sceptical tournament committess.
Win or lose,they,as like as not,tend to disrupt the events they enter and thus find the protection extended to them by the Laws offset by their inability to prove that,by their action,they have not violated the Proprieties"