Ethics Question
#1
Posted 2009-November-03, 09:45
He was playing against some LOLs at the local club when it seemed to him that RHO, a particulalry mean LOL, wasn't paying attention. Spades were trump and two hearts were left on board, LHO having the master in that suit. RHO had two trump left and he executed the following coup, leading from the dummy:
'Play the high heart.'
RHO duly ruffed and he overruffed, crossed to dummy (drawing the last trump) and enjoyed the long heart for an overtrick.
This got me to thinking. There are obviously many instances where you can try to exploit the opponents by phrasing your dummy calls in different ways; but there are equally many opportunities where, if your calls are always the same in certain situations, the opponents can exploit your limited lexicon. Is there a line?
It seems to me that maybe I should vary what I say if I find myself possibly giving a wire. But don't you think it's unethical to try to get an opponent to play a certain card through your language?
#2
Posted 2009-November-03, 09:55
♣QJT9
♣x
and called for a LOW club in the hopes RHO does not pop K so we can take a ruffing finesse on the next round, or
♣QJT9
♣Axx
and called for the Queen to induce a cover?
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#3
Posted 2009-November-03, 09:59
Even though I feel pretty strongly I wouldn't be surprised if there is much disagreement. I've long been on record that I think it's unethical to play a card simply because you hope an opponent sees it incorrectly and thinks it's a card of the other suit of that same color. But some people seem to in fact be quite proud of pulling that one off, which seems quite awful to me. So all you can say is people view things differently.
#5
Posted 2009-November-03, 10:56
I have not been a part of any discussion concerning deliberately varying the manner in which one designates a card to be played from dummy, nor have I seen any discussion of such a "tactic" in the bridge literature. As long as the designation of a card from dummy is a legal designation, and is done without any undue emphasis or unusual tempo, I see no problem - legal, ethical, or otherwise.
Josh's suggestion that it may be unethical to play a card in the hope that an opponent will see it as something else (a color coup, for example - ♣Q led from dummy - RHO, who is void in clubs, "follows" with the ♠K hoping to induce the play of the ♣A by declarer) is probably in a gray area. It is a legal play and if done in tempo without any particular emphasis is probably more in the area of gamesmanship than unsportsmanlike or unethical behavior. But I can see how it might bother someone.
#6
Posted 2009-November-03, 11:13
jdonn, on Nov 3 2009, 10:59 AM, said:
Even though I feel pretty strongly I wouldn't be surprised if there is much disagreement. I've long been on record that I think it's unethical to play a card simply because you hope an opponent sees it incorrectly and thinks it's a card of the other suit of that same color. But some people seem to in fact be quite proud of pulling that one off, which seems quite awful to me. So all you can say is people view things differently.
Agree with 1, disagree with 2 (I wouldn't do it but I don't mind it). I think Kevin's story would be clearly unethical if declarer had said "cash the hearts" or s.th. like that.
#7
Posted 2009-November-03, 11:25
I don't see the difference between that and thinking to yourself "I'll play a club since hopefully he will see a spade." One just takes advantage of bad hearing and the other of bad eyesight. Yet when I have posed this question to people in the past, I have many cases of people thinking the first one is dispicible and the second one is a perfectly great strategy.
#8
Posted 2009-November-03, 11:44
jdonn, on Nov 3 2009, 12:25 PM, said:
I don't see the difference between that and thinking to yourself "I'll play a club since hopefully he will see a spade." One just takes advantage of bad hearing and the other of bad eyesight. Yet when I have posed this question to people in the past, I have many cases of people thinking the first one is dispicible and the second one is a perfectly great strategy.
I was assuming people were just trying to exploit their opponent's failure to pay attention. Trying the colour coup against someone with bad eyesight indeed is unethical (both in the bidge and the common sense of the word).
#9
Posted 2009-November-03, 11:54
jdonn, on Nov 3 2009, 10:59 AM, said:
Even though I feel pretty strongly I wouldn't be surprised if there is much disagreement. I've long been on record that I think it's unethical to play a card simply because you hope an opponent sees it incorrectly and thinks it's a card of the other suit of that same color. But some people seem to in fact be quite proud of pulling that one off, which seems quite awful to me. So all you can say is people view things differently.
So in the Josh universe we are required to discard an opposite colored suit?
the Freman, Chani from the move "Dune"
"I learned long ago, never to wrestle with a pig. You get dirty, and besides, the pig likes it."
George Bernard Shaw
#10
Posted 2009-November-03, 11:56
TylerE, on Nov 3 2009, 11:12 AM, said:
So in the Tyler universe we unsportsmanlike if we require the opponents to "PAY ATTENTION"?
the Freman, Chani from the move "Dune"
"I learned long ago, never to wrestle with a pig. You get dirty, and besides, the pig likes it."
George Bernard Shaw
#11
Posted 2009-November-03, 12:21
jdonn, on Nov 3 2009, 12:25 PM, said:
I don't see the difference between that and thinking to yourself "I'll play a club since hopefully he will see a spade." One just takes advantage of bad hearing and the other of bad eyesight. Yet when I have posed this question to people in the past, I have many cases of people thinking the first one is dispicible and the second one is a perfectly great strategy.
Okay Josh let's try this one. You are in a long team match playing vs some near and octogenarians. You are in a contract where you already know exactly how many tricks you are going to take but also know that the opponents can't tell exactly what is going on. Do you play out the hand to try to tire them out so that their endurance will be at the lowest for the end of the match or are you ethically bound to claim?
the Freman, Chani from the move "Dune"
"I learned long ago, never to wrestle with a pig. You get dirty, and besides, the pig likes it."
George Bernard Shaw
#12
Posted 2009-November-03, 12:22
cherdanno, on Nov 3 2009, 12:44 PM, said:
jdonn, on Nov 3 2009, 12:25 PM, said:
I don't see the difference between that and thinking to yourself "I'll play a club since hopefully he will see a spade." One just takes advantage of bad hearing and the other of bad eyesight. Yet when I have posed this question to people in the past, I have many cases of people thinking the first one is dispicible and the second one is a perfectly great strategy.
I was assuming people were just trying to exploit their opponent's failure to pay attention. Trying the colour coup against someone with bad eyesight indeed is unethical (both in the bidge and the common sense of the word).
Now we have to be judges of the eyesight of the opponents to be ethical?
What do you think of the example I gave? It could also catch someone with good hearing who isn't paying very close attention.
#13
Posted 2009-November-03, 12:24
pooltuna, on Nov 3 2009, 01:21 PM, said:
jdonn, on Nov 3 2009, 12:25 PM, said:
I don't see the difference between that and thinking to yourself "I'll play a club since hopefully he will see a spade." One just takes advantage of bad hearing and the other of bad eyesight. Yet when I have posed this question to people in the past, I have many cases of people thinking the first one is dispicible and the second one is a perfectly great strategy.
Okay Josh let's try this one. You are in a long team match playing vs some near and octogenarians. You are in a contract where you already know exactly how many tricks you are going to take but also know that the opponents can't tell exactly what is going on. Do you play out the hand to try to tire them out so that their endurance will be at the lowest for the end of the match or are you ethically bound to claim?
Thank you for (not?) answering my question?
In your example you should claim. You should not try to take advantage of the health of your opponents in any of these cases.
And in the Josh world you get to discard whatever you think is the best bridge play but not to consider what it may appear as visually to opponents. It's intent that matters.
#14
Posted 2009-November-03, 12:35
I don't see the difference between that and thinking to yourself "I'll play a club since hopefully he will see a spade." One just takes advantage of bad hearing and the other of bad eyesight. Yet when I have posed this question to people in the past, I have many cases of people thinking the first one is dispicible and the second one is a perfectly great strategy. [/QUOTE]
Thank you for (not?) answering my question? [/quote]
Frankly it would never have occurred to me. But then again that doesn't stop the opponent from waiting to play until dummy detaches it from the board. Frankly I don't think physical limitations is an excuse for misplay if you can't handle them you shouldn't be playing and that includes stamina [not that I would play out the hand as I usually try to end the hand ASAP]
the Freman, Chani from the move "Dune"
"I learned long ago, never to wrestle with a pig. You get dirty, and besides, the pig likes it."
George Bernard Shaw
#15
Posted 2009-November-03, 12:43
jdonn, on Nov 3 2009, 01:22 PM, said:
cherdanno, on Nov 3 2009, 12:44 PM, said:
jdonn, on Nov 3 2009, 12:25 PM, said:
I don't see the difference between that and thinking to yourself "I'll play a club since hopefully he will see a spade." One just takes advantage of bad hearing and the other of bad eyesight. Yet when I have posed this question to people in the past, I have many cases of people thinking the first one is dispicible and the second one is a perfectly great strategy.
I was assuming people were just trying to exploit their opponent's failure to pay attention. Trying the colour coup against someone with bad eyesight indeed is unethical (both in the bidge and the common sense of the word).
Now we have to be judges of the eyesight of the opponents to be ethical?
What do you think of the example I gave? It could also catch someone with good hearing who isn't paying very close attention.
I don't remember who said this somewhere else in the thread:
Quote
#16
Posted 2009-November-03, 12:47
pooltuna, on Nov 3 2009, 01:21 PM, said:
Many years ago a friend of mine was playing in a Spingold match. He was about 22 years old (I was only a year or two older at the time). He related to me about the advice that he received from a bridge acquaintence of his. The advice was to never claim - play every hand out no matter how trivial the play of the hand. In that way, the opponents would have to expend all of their energy on defense of non-existent problems and it would tire them out.
Sure enough, my friend's team won against a favored (not a top) team.
It was still early in my bridge life when this happened. A while later I found out that this was unethical - that a player is under an ethical obligation to curtail play when the result is a certainty. Forcing your opponents to defend against non-existent problems is unethical. Unless I am mistaken, this is found in the proprieties - it is not a matter of law, but it is considered to be absolutely wrong.
#17
Posted 2009-November-03, 12:56
Nothing is wrong with taking advantage of someone not paying attention through methods like discarding down to a singleton king before you think he is watching your discards, or discarding an ace from A7 when the only other card left is a 4 since you think he didn't pay attention to whether the 7 was played. But I can't accept taking advantage of a club looking like a spade.
I probably should leave this thread now given pooltuna's dispicible comment about people with physical limitations, as I couldn't give it a fair reply without offering up comparisons that appear offensive or otherwise making comments that would probably get me warned.
#18
Posted 2009-November-03, 12:59
jdonn, on Nov 3 2009, 12:25 PM, said:
Pretty sure the Ace - Eight designations let the opponent correct their play if they mishear you. A rules guru can cite chapter and verse here.
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#19
Posted 2009-November-03, 13:00
- Law 46 A: "... declarer should clearly state both the suit and the rank ...".
- Introduction: '... "should" do (failure to do so is an infraction ...)'.
Robin
"Robin Barker is a mathematician. ... All highly skilled in their respective fields and clearly accomplished bridge players."
#20
Posted 2009-November-03, 13:21
RMB1, on Nov 3 2009, 02:00 PM, said:
- Law 46 A: "... declarer should clearly state both the suit and the rank ...".
- Introduction: '... "should" do (failure to do so is an infraction ...)'.
Robin
Before you jump to a conclusion about the commission of an infraction, you should quote the ENTIRE law, not just a snippet that seems to support your conclusion. Here is Paragraph B of Law 46:
B. Incomplete or Erroneous Call of a Card
In case of an incomplete or erroneous call by declarer of the card to be played from dummy, the following restrictions apply, except when declarer’s different intention is incontrovertible:
1. (a) If declarer in playing from dummy calls “high”, or words of like meaning, he is deemed to have called the highest card.
(b ) If he directs dummy to “win” the trick he is deemed to have called the lowest card that it is known will win the trick.
(c ) If he calls “low”, or words of like meaning, he is deemed to have called the lowest card.
2. If declarer designates a suit but not a rank he is deemed to have called the lowest card of the suit indicated.
3. If declarer designates a rank but not a suit
(a) In leading, declarer is deemed to have continued the suit in which dummy won the preceding trick, provided there is a card of the designated rank in that suit.
(b ) In all other cases declarer must play a card from dummy of the designated rank if he can legally do so. If there are two or more such cards that can be legally played, declarer must designate which is intended.
4. If declarer calls a card that is not in dummy, the call is void and declarer may designate any legal card.
5. If declarer indicates a play without designating either a suit or a rank (as by saying “play anything” or words of like meaning), either defender may designate the play from dummy.
Furthermore, the quote from the introduction to the laws reads as follows:
"...'should' do (failure to do it is an infraction jeopardizing the infractor’s rights but not often penalized),..."
So, while you may be technically correct that the call for a "high" card or a "low" card from dummy is an infraction, it is an infraction that is corrected by the interpretation provided in Law 46B 1. and is not subject to penalty.