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Writing Down The Contract ACBL

#21 User is offline   Vampyr 

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Posted 2018-April-08, 18:47

 BudH, on 2018-April-07, 13:40, said:

I strongly encourage the North players to enter the contract immediately into the Bridgemate and, while it is still in hand, enter the opening lead immediately after it is faced to avoid the "what was the opening lead?" after the play ends.


Easy solution to this. Just don’t enable the function that requires you to enter the opening lead.
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#22 User is offline   pran 

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Posted 2018-April-08, 19:57

 barmar, on 2018-April-08, 18:16, said:

The software feature he's suggesting is two confirmation points: when the contract/lead is entered, and when the final score is entered.

I think the assumption in the design of all the electronic scoring devices is that it's enough to confirm the contract as part of confirming the final result. The rare occasions when there's a disagreement over what the contract was is not enough to require an extra step on every board.

Quite correct!
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#23 User is offline   StevenG 

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Posted 2018-April-09, 01:40

 barmar, on 2018-April-08, 18:16, said:

The software feature he's suggesting is two confirmation points: when the contract/lead is entered, and when the final score is entered.

I think the assumption in the design of all the electronic scoring devices is that it's enough to confirm the contract as part of confirming the final result. The rare occasions when there's a disagreement over what the contract was is not enough to require an extra step on every board.

I understand that. But the software cannot tell the difference between the contract/lead being entered at the end of the auction, or it being entered at the end of play of the hand.
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#24 User is offline   BudH 

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Posted 2018-April-09, 06:07

 Vampyr, on 2018-April-08, 18:47, said:

Easy solution to this. Just don’t enable the function that requires you to enter the opening lead.

Of course, the emphasis here was on entering the contract immediately and making it easily visible to one of the opponents.

Some clubs, such as my local club, want the opening lead entered. It does also help prevent incorrect declarer designations. The need for score corrections has significantly decreased due to this.

Yes, I am aware if there are sleepy opponents not paying attention, and if the feature for the table to correct a score in the same round without the Director is enabled, then North can use this feature to cheat - I've mentioned this on this site and other sites. But it does take a lot of keystrokes and opponents not paying attention to be useful. (Plus, if there is any suspicion, you can check the Bridgemate log and this North player would be quickly busted - and hopefully banned from the club for a significantly long time.)
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#25 User is offline   VixTD 

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Posted 2018-April-09, 06:28

I think there are valid arguments for routinely taking a few seconds before selecting a lead. A lead selected immediately against a 1NT - 3NT auction suggests to the other players that it was an obvious choice, so perhaps a better suit than after a more thoughtful lead. I try to make my opening leads, as I do my bids, in tempo, and see nothing wrong in using that few seconds to write down the contract in my score card.

I get irritated by the "always lead before you fill in your scorecard" argument.
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#26 User is offline   Vampyr 

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Posted 2018-April-09, 06:35

 BudH, on 2018-April-09, 06:07, said:

Of course, the emphasis here was on entering the contract immediately and making it easily visible to one of the opponents.

Some clubs, such as my local club, want the opening lead entered. It does also help prevent incorrect declarer designations. The need for score corrections has significantly decreased due to this.

Yes, I am aware if there are sleepy opponents not paying attention, and if the feature for the table to correct a score in the same round without the Director is enabled, then North can use this feature to cheat - I've mentioned this on this site and other sites. But it does take a lot of keystrokes and opponents not paying attention to be useful. (Plus, if there is any suspicion, you can check the Bridgemate log and this North player would be quickly busted - and hopefully banned from the club for a significantly long time.)


But how many score corrections were there in the past? One per evening for every ten tables? Doesn’t seem like a big deal. In any case, turning over one of the opening leader’s cards should be enough. Maybe a half on average additional correction for a table that forgot t arrow-switch one of the boards.

About the ability to,change scores without the director present, you could of course do it after the opponents have left the table. It does not take many keystrokes; “=“ and “accept” would do. Anyway I was shocked to see this function enabled in Australia, before which I had thought that no SO in their right mind would have it turned on (actually, I didn’t know it was even possible). It is a ridiculous idea and I cannot see a reason for it.
I know not with what weapons World War III will be fought, but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones -- Albert Einstein
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#27 User is offline   pran 

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Posted 2018-April-09, 07:52

 Vampyr, on 2018-April-09, 06:35, said:

But how many score corrections were there in the past? One per evening for every ten tables? Doesn’t seem like a big deal. In any case, turning over one of the opening leader’s cards should be enough. Maybe a half on average additional correction for a table that forgot t arrow-switch one of the boards.

About the ability to,change scores without the director present, you could of course do it after the opponents have left the table. It does not take many keystrokes; “=“ and “accept” would do. Anyway I was shocked to see this function enabled in Australia, before which I had thought that no SO in their right mind would have it turned on (actually, I didn’t know it was even possible). It is a ridiculous idea and I cannot see a reason for it.

First of all: We (almost) always run barometer which means that the players receive their results for each round within a few minutes into the following round.

When players then approach me with a claim that an incorrect declarer has been entered and this claim is corroborated by the entered lead card I (usually) correct the error right away.

However, they know that with no such corroboration I will not make any correction without both pairs together approaching me (which of course is the normal procedure but means an extra burden on the players at a busy time).

I have noticed that the players are now much more conscious about correct registrations on Bridgemate than many of them were with their registrations on paper or when Bridgemate was new.

And they do appreciate the printouts showing cards, contracts, opening leads and results at every table for each board.
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#28 User is offline   blackshoe 

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Posted 2018-April-09, 08:41

 VixTD, on 2018-April-09, 06:28, said:

I get irritated by the "always lead before you fill in your scorecard" argument.

The little things that irritate people never cease to amaze me.
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#29 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2018-April-09, 09:00

 StevenG, on 2018-April-09, 01:40, said:

I understand that. But the software cannot tell the difference between the contract/lead being entered at the end of the auction, or it being entered at the end of play of the hand.

So?

While we often may not remember the opening lead, it's not considered critical (the software we use allows you to click "skip" for this). It's rare that there's a confusion over what the contract was.

As for why people like the opening lead entered, it goes well with the traveller feature. It's well known that the opening lead can be critical to an effective defense -- we have the well-known term "killing lead", and the aphorism that more tricks are given away by the opening lead than anything else. So it's often the answer to "How did they manage to make/set that unmakeable/cold contract?": "Oh, a club lead!" Our club also had a vote on whether to keep that feature enabled, and voted in favor as well, even though our web site with the recap doesn't show it.

#30 User is offline   Vampyr 

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Posted 2018-April-09, 11:35

 barmar, on 2018-April-09, 09:00, said:

So?

While we often may not remember the opening lead, it's not considered critical (the software we use allows you to click "skip" for this). It's rare that there's a confusion over what the contract was.

As for why people like the opening lead entered, it goes well with the traveller feature. It's well known that the opening lead can be critical to an effective defense -- we have the well-known term "killing lead", and the aphorism that more tricks are given away by the opening lead than anything else. So it's often the answer to "How did they manage to make/set that unmakeable/cold contract?": "Oh, a club lead!" Our club also had a vote on whether to keep that feature enabled, and voted in favor as well, even though our web site with the recap doesn't show it.


We have to enter the opening lead at some tournaments, but the lead is not shown when we view the results at other tables. So the function it is pointless, and thus it is good enough to just enter any card held by the opening leader.
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#31 User is offline   pescetom 

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Posted 2018-April-09, 12:50

 barmar, on 2018-April-09, 09:00, said:

It's rare that there's a confusion over what the contract was.

It happens in my club (particularly disputes about whether the contract was doubled or not), unlike other possible mishaps such as exposed cards or bids out of turn, which merit entire laws and correction mechanisms but fortunately never seem to happen. Probably I'm just unlucky.

 barmar, on 2018-April-09, 09:00, said:

As for why people like the opening lead entered, it goes well with the traveller feature. It's well known that the opening lead can be critical to an effective defense -- we have the well-known term "killing lead", and the aphorism that more tricks are given away by the opening lead than anything else. So it's often the answer to "How did they manage to make/set that unmakeable/cold contract?": "Oh, a club lead!" Our club also had a vote on whether to keep that feature enabled, and voted in favor as well, even though our web site with the recap doesn't show it.

I'm fighting hard to get my club to adopt Bridgemate or a similar system, but I certainly wouldn't do so if it meant giving up the information about opening leads currently available from travellers. Electronic scorekeeping should make the post-mortem more fruitful ("what percentage of tables lead hearts and how did they fare?"), not less.
Entering the opening lead also enables the system to check that the declarer has been correctly designated, which is another error that sometimes happens, in my club at least.
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#32 User is offline   VixTD 

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Posted 2018-April-10, 06:43

 blackshoe, on 2018-April-09, 08:41, said:

The little things that irritate people never cease to amaze me.

It's the assumption that there cannot be anything to think about when choosing an opening lead that I find irritating, or that players are incapable of continuing the thinking process while writing down the contract and declarer. It's similar to requiring thinking time as a defender after the play of trick one has been completed. I don't see why that irritation should amaze anyone, but perhaps you belong to the "play by rote" category of bridge player.
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#33 User is offline   gordontd 

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Posted 2018-April-10, 06:51

 Vampyr, on 2018-April-09, 11:35, said:

We have to enter the opening lead at some tournaments, but the lead is not shown when we view the results at other tables. So the function it is pointless, and thus it is good enough to just enter any card held by the opening leader.

So you would bother to check that a card that was not led was in the opening-leader's hand in order to avoid giving information that might be of interest to others after the event, just because you can't see it during the event?
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#34 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2018-April-10, 08:19

 Vampyr, on 2018-April-09, 11:35, said:

We have to enter the opening lead at some tournaments, but the lead is not shown when we view the results at other tables. So the function it is pointless, and thus it is good enough to just enter any card held by the opening leader.

Does it show up on the web site with the results?

#35 User is offline   WellSpyder 

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Posted 2018-April-10, 08:21

 VixTD, on 2018-April-10, 06:43, said:

... or that players are incapable of continuing the thinking process while writing down the contract and declarer.....

While it may be a slightly harsh way of putting it, this is indeed quite close to the assumption I make here. I find it hard to believe that many people think as effectively about their opening lead while also doing other things as they would do if they focused just on thinking about the lead. I therefore also believe that in almost all cases where people write down the contract and declarer first, the opening lead takes longer than it otherwise would have done.
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#36 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2018-April-10, 08:24

 pescetom, on 2018-April-09, 12:50, said:

I'm fighting hard to get my club to adopt Bridgemate or a similar system, but I certainly wouldn't do so if it meant giving up the information about opening leads currently available from travellers.

Paper travellers in ACBL here have never had a place to enter opening leads. We didn't start doing it at our club until we adopted electronic scoring.

I've never seen it enabled on the scoring devices at any ACBL tournament, but they also don't enable traveller display. When tournaments used paper, they used pick-up slips, not travellers, so players weren't in the habit of seeing previous results.

#37 User is offline   blackshoe 

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Posted 2018-April-10, 08:29

 VixTD, on 2018-April-10, 06:43, said:

perhaps you belong to the "play by rote" category of bridge player.

Sure, that must be it. :angry:
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#38 User is offline   pran 

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Posted 2018-April-10, 08:54

 Vampyr, on 2018-April-09, 11:35, said:

We have to enter the opening lead at some tournaments, but the lead is not shown when we view the results at other tables. So the function it is pointless, and thus it is good enough to just enter any card held by the opening leader.

 barmar, on 2018-April-10, 08:19, said:

Does it show up on the web site with the results?

With our scoring programs it sure does.
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#39 User is offline   pescetom 

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Posted 2018-April-10, 10:48

 barmar, on 2018-April-10, 08:24, said:

Paper travellers in ACBL here have never had a place to enter opening leads. We didn't start doing it at our club until we adopted electronic scoring.

I've never seen it enabled on the scoring devices at any ACBL tournament, but they also don't enable traveller display. When tournaments used paper, they used pick-up slips, not travellers, so players weren't in the habit of seeing previous results.


That's interesting. In Italy paper travellers always have a place to enter opening leads, and there is pressure from both peers and director to fill it in accurately. Sometimes there is no place to enter who was declarer and thus the lead is the only way to work this out (and to cross check that the score is assigned to the right line).
When declarer has made less tricks than others playing the same contract, the first thing he does is to ask to see the traveller, hoping to be able to claim that he was just unlucky to receive a different lead B-)
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#40 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2018-April-11, 08:36

 pran, on 2018-April-10, 08:54, said:

With our scoring programs it sure does.

I was asking Vampyr, since she said entering the lead is pointless. Obviously if your site displays it, it's not pointless for your club.

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