peachy, on Aug 18 2010, 10:24 PM, said:
dburn, on Aug 18 2010, 04:16 PM, said:
blackshoe, on Aug 18 2010, 03:50 PM, said:
If I am allowed to ask the Director what the ramifications are of an established revoke, why am I not allowed to ask the Director what the ramifications are of going four down doubled non-vulnerable?
At the time, the Director (one of England's very best and an occasional poster to this forum) considered that he should not tell me the ramifications of the established revoke expressly because to do so would constitute an aid to my memory, calculation or technique. Since he didn't actually need to tell me anyway, the point was not pursued.
But it remains the case in my view that if a player wants to know what the Laws say about anything at all, he is entitled to know what they say, and any attempt to find out what they say cannot be considered a breach of Law 40C3a or of anything else. If as pran remarks "no player is expected to have the laws memorized", then if players are expected to abide by the Laws, they should have unrestricted access to them at all times. Anything else is so at variance with the principles of natural justice as to be completely absurd - it's not only strange, it's also false.
Dburn makes a valid argument. In the original posted case, the person should then have called director and asked the TD "how much is 3 down doubled". His partner of course is under UI restrictions, right? Whether he asked TD or illegally (IMO) or legally consulted the scoring table?
Perhaps this is something new laws ,whenever they come, could consider: Move the scoring tables to an Attachment or Addendum instead of having them incorporated in the laws themselves. It is an aid memoire.
Come on folks!
Law 9B2. No player shall take any action until the Director has explained all matters in regard to rectification.
Can you not see the difference between calling the Director to an irregularity and calling him just to get some information without there being any irregularity?
I am extremely surprised that "one of Englands very best directors" called to a revoke failed to explain all matters in regard to rectification on that revoke, and I still maintain that this must have been a director's error. Just very fortunate that it apparently did not matter in the actual case.