RMB1, on Aug 24 2010, 10:19 AM, said:
As a practical matter, I think players are expected to know/remember the laws as they relate to normal play (e.g. bids must be sufficient, follow suit, doubled vulnerable undertricks are 200, then 300 a piece). But players are entitled to be told the laws as they relate to action following an actual irregularity.
I think I am acting in the mistaken belief that Law 10C1 continues "the Director shall explain all the options available and their consequences for the rest of the play of the hand." Without that wording, my belief appears to be an act of blind faith in my training.
In my honest opinion this is an obvious consequence of the clause
the Director shall explain all the options available in Law 10C1. He dosen't explain "all" unless he includes the consequences.
RMB1, on Aug 24 2010, 10:19 AM, said:
[Returning to the subject of the thread, and to continue a rant I delivered at Brighton.] Whatever the laws in general say or should say, Law 27 as it stands should be treated as a special case or should explicitly state what information should be available to which players during the process of operating the law. The law as it finally appeared in the "2007" Law Book is not operable in line with principles elsewhere in the laws, and no amount of subsequent "interpretation" by WBFLC has changed that.
Here I must strongly disagree. Maybe because I myself have been involved in the work on Law 27, but I have no difficulty applying Law 27B1 (which I believe is the part of Law 27 that causes the most problems for Directors?) in its present state.
RMB1, on Aug 24 2010, 10:19 AM, said:
It is wrong that the basis for a ruling (the meaning of the insufficient bid) is determined by the word of an offender, given away from the other players. It is wrong that the TD's judgement on which calls by offender will not silence partner is made available to the offender (but not other players) before the offender selects his call (above and beyond having Law 27B1b read to the offender).
All of this is perfectly correct: The Director shall definitely not take the words from one person on the offending side alone for a fact; he must of course judge the complete situation and establish for himself an opinion whether or not the conditions in Law 27B1a or Law 27B1b are satisfied, and then rule correspondingly.
Don't forget that both parts of Law 27B1 contain the words:
in the Director’s opinion. And honestly I question the reason for taking any player away from the table in this process. After all the Director must base his Law 27 ruling on information that is AI to all the players at the table.
(If some player should during this process provide any information that is UI to his partner then that will be a separate irregularity to be dealt with after ruling on the insufficient bid.)
RMB1, on Aug 24 2010, 10:19 AM, said:
If the provisions of Law 27 are not substantially changed, then we need clear statements on how the law should operate and the exceptional way that information is made available to both sides during the operation of the law.