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Law 25A or not Sweden

#21 User is offline   jhenrikj 

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Posted 2011-March-22, 08:51

View Postbluejak, on 2011-March-21, 14:32, said:

In my view it is permitted to use Law 25A to change an unintended call when in time even if partner has drawn your attention to it in some way and that is not treated as an infraction so no later adjustment is suitable.

I am not saying that the Laws or Regulations make this clear, just that this is the way authorities seem to be treating it. Better would be if the Regulations said so.


Is there anything written down from WBF LC or any AC where we can find this?

Edit I can answer my own question...

Quote

EBU Laws and Ethics Committee minutes, 16th May 2007:
> >>
> >> 3.9 Player being woken up by an Alert or Announcement
> >>
> >> The Committee considered correspondence where a player
> >> intended to open 1S but placed 1NT on the table. When
> >> partner announced 12 to 14, the player realised his
> >> error. The Committee noted there were other situations
> >> where, for example, an alert might wake the player up.
> >> The Committee confirmed that knowledge of the
> >> mechanical error was authorised information; the TD
> >> should be summoned who could apply Law 25A.


And since the information given was authorised from north to south, we can't give any penalty to north and we can't use 12A1 either.

Who said Crime doesn't pay ;=)
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#22 User is offline   VixTD 

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Posted 2011-March-22, 12:42

Surely there's a distinction to be made between cases in which a player happens to alert partner to their mistake in the process of following correct procedure (as in alerting, announcing, answering a legitimately-asked question) and those in which they make a gratuitous comment about partner's action (as in "did you really mean to bid that?") in breach of laws 73A and B, and 74B.

The first situation may be covered by the Laws and Ethics Committee minute cited below, but the second is not.
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#23 User is offline   jhenrikj 

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Posted 2011-March-22, 12:57

View PostVixTD, on 2011-March-22, 12:42, said:

Surely there's a distinction to be made between cases in which a player happens to alert partner to their mistake in the process of following correct procedure (as in alerting, announcing, answering a legitimately-asked question) and those in which they make a gratuitous comment about partner's action (as in "did you really mean to bid that?") in breach of laws 73A and B, and 74B.

The first situation may be covered by the Laws and Ethics Committee minute cited below, but the second is not.


I agree there should be...so the PP might still be in order?
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#24 User is offline   Vampyr 

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Posted 2011-March-22, 14:32

View Postjhenrikj, on 2011-March-22, 08:51, said:

Who said Crime doesn't pay ;=)


Crime? The idea is that the auction is authorised information to everyone.

I think that this regulation is sensible, but I also believe that it is little known. Once I opened 1. I was staring off into space and didn't notice my partner alerting, but then I heard him explain that I was showing balanced 20-22 or GF. I looked down and saw that I had in fact opened 2.

I didn't know what was right here, so I phoned Bluejak for guidance, and found out the correct practice in the EBU. But I have passed the County Directors' course and I didn't know, so I suspect that a lot of people would be surprised.
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#25 User is offline   jhenrikj 

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Posted 2011-March-23, 15:34

I read the Swedish regulations on bidding boxes and from there you could argue that an unintended call in fact is an irregularity. I don't know if the regulations is the same all over the world, but in Sweden it says that you have to decide what to bid before touching the box. This would mean that picking a call at random is not allowed. An unintended call is in fact picked by random since it's not what you decided to call. And since anyone during the bidding period may point out an irregularity north has not made an infraction.
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#26 User is offline   bluejak 

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Posted 2011-March-23, 19:00

How does he know it is an infraction?
David Stevenson

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#27 User is online   blackshoe 

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Posted 2011-March-23, 20:55

Chapter One of the Laws provides some definitions:

Quote

Infraction: A player’s breach of law or of lawful regulation.
Irregularity: A deviation from correct procedure inclusive of, but not limited to, those which involve an infraction by a player.

Clearly an unintended call is an irregularity, but not an infraction. Even given a regulation that says "decide what you want to bid before touching the box".
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#28 User is offline   jallerton 

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Posted 2011-March-24, 02:40

View Postjhenrikj, on 2011-March-22, 04:31, said:

Jallerton, your approach results in some strange situations....

1NT - 2NT (unintended, intended call was 2). Now south, because of the lack of alert on 2NT (which of course not should be alerted), finds out he actually bid 2NT and want to change. By doing absolutely nothing wrong, north has now denied south to change his unintended call. This means that in every situation where an unintended call is alerted where the intended call should not have been or the other way around we can't change according to 25A. So, shortly 25A applies only when both the unintended call and the intended is either natural or artificial.

I can't find any support for that in the laws.


In that case, please read Law 73C again and consider it in the light of South's actions. However, I agree with VixTD that situation is rather different to that of the opening post, as here the UI generated by Responder was generated simply by adhering to the local alerting regulations.

In addition to the cases where the alertability of the unintended and intended calls is the same, Law 25A can be applied without worrying about Law 73C whenever the bidder realises his error before his partner has had a chance to alert.

Bluejak told us some time ago that at his table, there are several instance per session of a player pulling out the wrong bidding card out of the box, and that he considers Law 25A to apply to such a scenario. My impression was that in most of these cases the player realises that he has pulled out the wrong bidding cards before he has placed them on the table, i.e. before his partner has even seen the unintended call.
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#29 User is offline   bluejak 

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Posted 2011-March-24, 09:18

Certainly. I personally am very bad at pulling out the intended call, but have trained myself to look at what I take out of the box. In the ACBL I would be correcting it before the call is made because of different regulations so Law 25A would not apply.

But the question is whether you may change an unintended call when you have attention brought to it by partner, whether through something legal or illegal. My understanding is still that you may change it as an interpretation of the Law. I suppose it is part of this strange idea of "getting a bridge result" which I, of course, think is complete nonsense. Bridge results to me include the results of infractions. So do not misunderstand: I do not approve of players being allowed to change because of their partner's infractions but I understand that they are allowed to.

Of course you could certainly issue a PP to partner for whatever he has done.
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#30 User is offline   jallerton 

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Posted 2011-March-24, 13:23

View Postbluejak, on 2011-March-24, 09:18, said:

But the question is whether you may change an unintended call when you have attention brought to it by partner, whether through something legal or illegal. My understanding is still that you may change it as an interpretation of the Law. I suppose it is part of this strange idea of "getting a bridge result" which I, of course, think is complete nonsense. Bridge results to me include the results of infractions. So do not misunderstand: I do not approve of players being allowed to change because of their partner's infractions but I understand that they are allowed to.


Thanks for the clarification. Is it your understanding that his "interpretation" was issued at WBF, EBL or national level?
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#31 User is offline   bluejak 

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Posted 2011-March-24, 15:10

I think all three. There was something in a WBFLC minute, I think it was said at San Remo, and it is part of EBU training.

Of course a direct and simple statement would be jolly helpful. Tough. :lol:
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#32 User is offline   jhenrikj 

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Posted 2011-March-24, 18:02

I have recived answers from Marc, Jeanne and Ton from Holland. (their last names is to difficult to spell this late at night but I think you all know who I me
They agree that the change to 2 should be allowed, but they don't know if we can change the score according to 12A1. Marc and Ton will discuss this during the weeakend.
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#33 User is offline   lamford 

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Posted 2011-March-24, 20:33

View Postjallerton, on 2011-March-21, 17:30, said:

It's not just a matter of "suppose we might". North has clearly breached Laws 73A1 and 73B1, and has gained an advantage thereby (unless South would have noticed anyway before North's call, which is far from certain).

South has clearly breached Law 73C.

Surely Law 12A1 is there for cases such as this.

This I agree with completely, and it is very different to the person discovering he has misbid because of an authorised alert or announcement. In the latter case, as I believe gordontd once pointed out, the person had already decided on his bid, but selected the wrong one inadvertently, and is therefore not using the UI. However, where there is a 73B1 infraction, as here, there is a more onerous duty on him, so he should be obliged to keep the original call in order not to take "any" advantage of the UI under 73C. Even if it was a "mechanical" error.

But I am sure the WBFLC will issue a clarification of when the bid can be changed.
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#34 User is offline   jallerton 

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Posted 2011-March-27, 11:53

View Postlamford, on 2011-March-24, 20:33, said:

This I agree with completely, and it is very different to the person discovering he has misbid because of an authorised alert or announcement. In the latter case, as I believe gordontd once pointed out, the person had already decided on his bid, but selected the wrong one inadvertently, and is therefore not using the UI. However, where there is a 73B1 infraction, as here, there is a more onerous duty on him, so he should be obliged to keep the original call in order not to take "any" advantage of the UI under 73C. Even if it was a "mechanical" error.

But I am sure the WBFLC will issue a clarification of when the bid can be changed.


By "an authorised alert or announcement" I assume you are referring to procedures "authorised" by the Regulatory Authority. Unfortunately, that does not make the information from the alert or announcement "authorised information" as far as the alerter's/announcer's partner is concerned; Law 73C specifically states that this information is unauthorised for that player who "must carefully avoid taking any advantage from that unauthorised information".
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#35 User is offline   lamford 

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Posted 2011-March-29, 09:54

View Postjallerton, on 2011-March-27, 11:53, said:

By "an authorised alert or announcement" I assume you are referring to procedures "authorised" by the Regulatory Authority. Unfortunately, that does not make the information from the alert or announcement "authorised information" as far as the alerter's/announcer's partner is concerned; Law 73C specifically states that this information is unauthorised for that player who "must carefully avoid taking any advantage from that unauthorised information".

Your view is certainly reasonable, and I prefer that approach, but the WBFLC has decreed that the player is allowed to use the information to discover that he has made an mechanical error. He is not selecting a bid indicated by the UI, because he had already previously made the selection.
I prefer to give the lawmakers credit for stating things for a reason - barmar
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