A long pause is the antithesis of deception.
#1
Posted 2024-January-26, 10:19
"100% certain that many excellent players would disagree. This is far more about style/judgment than right vs. wrong." Fred
"Hysterical Raisins again - this time on the World stage, not just the ACBL" mycroft
#2
Posted 2024-January-26, 12:59
I apologize for the incomplete post. I tried editing it, but I couldn't navigate it properly. My question is about a statement that I came across. The statement says, 'A long pause may give the show away,' and it resonated with me. I am curious to know more about this statement from others.
Thank you
ASC
#3
Posted 2024-January-26, 13:16
The concept seems straightforward enough. There are numerous situations where pausing reveals what you have - e.g. if declarer takes a finesse, it may be right to duck in 4th seat hoping they'll repeat it. Hesitating then ducking is pointless, since declarer then knows what you have, since it's illegal to pause deceptively.
Meanwhile partner has to bend over backwards to assume you might not have what the pause implied..
#4
Posted 2024-January-26, 13:27
smerriman, on 2024-January-26, 13:16, said:
The concept seems straightforward enough. There are numerous situations where pausing reveals what you have - e.g. if declarer takes a finesse, it may be right to duck in 4th seat hoping they'll repeat it. Hesitating then ducking is pointless, since declarer then knows what you have, since it's illegal to pause deceptively.
Meanwhile partner has to bend over backwards to assume you might not have what the pause implied..
#5
Posted 2024-January-26, 13:28
A pause is already a variation in tempo.
#6
Posted 2024-January-26, 13:33
Any significant hesitation by the defender is ‘the antithesis of deception’ because it telegraphs the Ace…there is no legitimate bridge reason for thinking at this point unless one is pondering whether to play the Ace. Hence the saying.
Note that hesitating without the ace would likely (and imo usually correctly) be seen as an illegal effort to deceive. Now, I’ve seen some beginners hesitate here because they’re trying to work out whether they should be giving count! Count may be obviously irrelevant to anyone beyond the beginner stage, but such players deserve some accommodation….if I were pretty sure that’s what was going on, as a Director, I’d explain why the hesitation is bad, and adjust the board accordingly (assuming declarer went wrong) but I’d try to make it a teaching experience rather than a disciplinary one.
My most embarrassing experience at the table (and I’ve had many, usually based on a bad bid or play) was against a friend….I held Qxx in a suit, in which dummy held AKJ9x. My friend, known on the auction to hold two or three cards in the suit, led the 10. I was genuinely distracted: he’d played quickly (but in no way ‘too quickly’ and I was considering the inferences from dummy, the auction and trick one…so I hesitated simply because I had to change mental horses in mid-stream.
Unfortunately I compounded matters by reflexively saying ‘sorry, I don’t have a problem’…..which was true in a sense in that covering was a zero play…it could never win but could lose if declarer took the anti-percentage play of trying to drop Qx offside.
Further unfortunately, declarer quite properly took my remark as saying I didn’t hold the queen, so he did try to drop it offside.
I felt awful…called the TD on myself….got an entirely appropriate lecture on my ethical responsibilities but the result stood. I was lucky it was against a friend….someone who didn’t know me could easily and justifiably think I’d done this deliberately. Why tell this story? To illustrate how it’s possible to cause problems through inappropriate hesitations (in my case compounded by a wrongly offered reflexive statement).
#7
Posted 2024-January-26, 13:36
ASC87, on 2024-January-26, 13:27, said:
I suggest you read the Laws, it takes a day or so but is well worthwhile.
For example, a player must carefully avoid taking advantage of partner's unmistakable hesitation or unwonted speed.
A player may not attempt to mislead an opponent by the haste or hesitancy of a call or play (as in hesitating before playing a
singleton).
#8
Posted 2024-January-26, 13:50
I do see the significance of pausing before playing a card, but If I understood correctly, any variation in tempo, even if stop cards are in play, can reveal valuable information to the opponents. Hence, I need to be cognizant of my tempo and avoid unintentionally revealing any play plan to the opponents, but equally important to not intentionally create any impressions. Is that correct?
pescetom, on 2024-January-26, 13:28, said:
A pause is already a variation in tempo, assuming that Stop cards are still in place.
#9
Posted 2024-January-26, 13:52
pescetom, on 2024-January-26, 13:36, said:
I suggest you read the Laws, it takes a day or so but is well worthwhile.
For example, a player must carefully avoid taking advantage of partner's unmistakable hesitation or unwonted speed.
A player may not attempt to mislead an opponent by the haste or hesitancy of a call or play (as in hesitating before playing a
singleton).
#10
Posted 2024-January-26, 13:57
But there are definitely some commonly occurring situations that you'll learn over time to see coming in advance, where playing in tempo will help you get better results.
As long as you're not pretending to think for the sake of deception, you have nothing to worry about when hesitating yourself. But you do need to be careful not to read into partner's hesitations, as that's akin to interpreting them winking at you across the table.
#11
Posted 2024-January-26, 14:05
My bedtime read: http://www.worldbrid...ohighlights.pdf
smerriman, on 2024-January-26, 13:57, said:
But there are definitely some commonly occurring situations that you'll learn over time to see coming in advance, where playing in tempo will help you get better results.
As long as you're not pretending to think for the sake of deception, you have nothing to worry about when hesitating yourself. But you do need to be careful not to read into partner's hesitations, as that's akin to interpreting them winking at you across the table.
#12
Posted 2024-January-26, 14:32
#13
Posted 2024-January-26, 15:32
ASC87, on 2024-January-26, 14:32, said:
Many forms of casual online bridge don't conform to the laws at all. It is the responsibility of a qualified director to decide whether any laws have been infringed, including whether there were legitimate reasons for a pause - including poor internet connections for online play, where they can have access to records of timing of previous plays, or whether a situation would require thought based on the skill level of the players in question, even if it wouldn't for others. Express tournaments have no director, and nobody really follows any rules.
#15
Posted 2024-January-26, 23:16
#17
Posted 2024-January-28, 10:24
As far as "going against the Laws" - I don't see any Law that regulation conflicts with. Therefore, by Law, that regulation is legal if approved by the chain of RAs (and the ACBL specifically devolves their RA power, almost 100%, to the clubs, one of which the Express games are run by).
In fact, arguably it is explicitly allowed by 80B2e "conditions of bidding and play", rather than 80B2f "supplementary to, but not conflicting with". 91A allows the "Director" to suspend a player from the current session for violating the regulation. The fact that enforcement is automatic doesn't seem to affect the rights.
If it makes you anxious to have to play at that speed, then the Express games are not for you. They're not for everyone; I know I've never played one (and I am probably a too fast player). Play one that goes at the pace you are comfortable playing. There are lots of them.
#18
Posted 2024-January-28, 13:08
mycroft, on 2024-January-28, 10:24, said:
The comments above were about deceptive hesitations and making use of UI being against the laws. Neither can be applied in express tournaments, nor is any form of disclosure (all players are told to use GIB's CC, but nobody does; generally you don't have a clue what any bids mean and can't ask).
It's definitely not a form of the game I'd recommend.

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