bluejak, on Oct 13 2009, 06:24 PM, said:
To my mind some of the comments in this thread are similar. The only way to get people to follow skip bid regulations is to make them simple, easy to follow, and consistent, and let people get into the groove. I really dislike the idea that some skip bids should have mandatory pauses and not others, because then no-one will agree which - and another useful regulation has been killed by the impractical triumphing over the pragmatic.
It does no harm to pause over every skip bid, and it is a working method. I have no problem with adding to it as the Norwegians have done, but the idea of people deciding not to enforce the pause when it is not useful is anathema.
Take, for example, 1NT p 3NT. Now there is a sequence which definitely needs a mandatory pause but I am sure people will not do so if the rule is made so that individual players decide. If people pause over every skip bid it does no harm whatever [and some good]. Of course people will moan, but that is what bridge players do best.
This raises the question:
What should be the consequence of failure to use STOP when required?
If you are suggesting that some kind of a procedure penalty should be automatic then I disagree.
Take your example: 1NT - pass - 3NT - ?pass
In nine out of ten cases three passes are automatic without any need for consideration by any player and it is a situation where the skip bidder most often fails to produce a STOP. In the tenth case there will be some hesitation and either a double (no problem) or a pass (
Director!)
If I should ever be called to a table in such cases (when an opponent had gone into the tank before passing) I should ask: Was STOP signalled? If not then no consequence of the hesitation and that is all.
It is the skip bidding side that may have reason for complaints on a BIT after a skip bid so it is in their interest to follow the regulation. If they don't then they have forfeited their rights, no need for any further penalty. End of story?
regards Sven