Laws of Bridge (1A)
It was interesting to see Ton Kooijman's ideas in Wednesday's
Bulletin. When on holiday with Bill ('Kojak') Schoder, WBF Chief TD,
in May, we did talk about a thought of deleting the word 'penalty'
from the mainstream laws and restricting its use to Laws 90 and
91.
In that way we would arrive in a position where an infraction
would lead to consequential sanctions or adjustments described in
the relevant Law. These would be independent of procedural penalties
applied by the Director in his discretion.
Examining the statement of such a proposition in Law showed that
there are difficulties - but our task is to overcome difficulties in
implementing whatever we believe to be the optimum effects of the
laws. I did draft a definition of 'penalty' in these terms:
"Penalties are of three kinds:
- Disciplinary - those applied for the maintenance of
Courtesy and good order.
- Procedural - penalties, additional to any consequential
penalty, awarded in the Director's discretion following procedural
irregularities.
- Consequential - a reparative award set out in the respective
Law as the consequence of the particular
infraction.
It seems that three of us, Ton, Kojak, and myself, have set our
eyes upon the same star, although it may be one at the outer limits
of time.
Grattan Endicott
Laws of Bridge (2A)
Reading Ton's second piece on the laws I am encouraged to think
that we might get back somewhere close to the European practice
under the 1975 laws. At that time our object when adjusting scores
in Europe was to produce an outcome for the table that represented
in a single score the fairest equity for the two sides that we could
judge. The rather crude weighting of scores then operating has since
been refined. It has been my constant opinion this approach to score
adjustment should be the objective and I hold in scorn the
taradiddle about 'at all probable' and 'most likely'; it was due to
the strong disenchantment of the 1984 EBL Laws Committee with the
extreme adjustments to which Law 12C2 would incline, that Zone 1
fought for the relief now embodied in Law 12C3. As for split scores,
there are occasions for them - such occasions as we met in the
second appeal at these Championships - but I believe they require to
be justified by the facts of the bridge and should not be the norm.
Lastly, one of my senior colleagues here in Salso thinks that we
should dispense with the word 'equity' in the laws and replace it
with some such term as 'fair judgment'.
Grattan Endicott |