matmat, on 2011-April-18, 15:46, said:
but p doesn't always do it, just sometimes (btw, this is a hypothetical partner).
I don't really see why the laws governing "style," if there are in fact any such laws, should distinguish between bidding and play. Why would it be okay to have concealed inferences available in play while not available in the bidding?
I a
Well Pooltuna -sorry matmat (edited),
If we assume that our fellow Laws expert posters are inclined to full disclosure,
I'd guess that (ignoring calls about leads out of turn,revokes, claims etc) almost all
problematic calls to directors are about bidding and not play. They can correct me if I am wrong.
IMO, that's because control of bidding is important and possible.
Legal control of play may well be even more important, but definitely not equally possible.
Even minnows have huge numbers of bidding agreements, explicit and implicit. They have close to zero,
(but not quite zero) ageeements about play.
We had a recent thread about play signals in the 'bridge' forums as against 'Laws'.
Just re-read those with an extreme Laws hat on - 'just bridge, bridge logic etc'.
The whole problem for a player is the total loss of innocence in the auction (officially, though real players
just get on with it, mostly).
We could (the Laws obviously support it from an extreme view) lose any innocence in the play. I would rather not.
I'm not saying the Laws (UI/MI..) don't apply to play in obvious situations, I'm saying that if the extremes of sophistication applied to any and every auction, applied to any and every play, the game would be entirely unplayable over the table.