jillybean, on 2011-May-04, 19:39, said:
The 1N bid was natural and not accepted.
I may not understand the laws correctly but this seems to be a risk free method to signal to partner that you have a minimum hand and that 2N is to play. 1N oops, I mean 2N.
Or, for partner to make an easy pass of the forced 2N.
Maybe I'm being too cynical.
First, there are various ways to cheat at bridge. The Laws are not really written to stop them: the general idea is that you catch someone eventually, and then expel them.
Second, of course there is an easy pass of the forced 2NT - well, forced is the wrong word, but we know what you mean - but that just means the Law may not be a good one, and anyway it is far too easy to look at only one problem rather than the overall approach. But if you want to discuss changing the Law, please use the correct forum.
Third, here we are trying to help people understand correct rulings. The ruling, as outlined by blackshoe in the second post, is clear enough.
Bbradley62, on 2011-May-05, 09:44, said:
This is the part I find the most interesting. How do you know this?
Part of the job of a TD is to determine facts and make conclusions therefrom.
aguahombre, on 2011-May-05, 11:01, said:
All I can say about that is, shame on Tom Kooijman and on the player who would pass 2NT.
Whatever you may think of Ton, blaming a player for following the Laws correctly is unacceptable.
jhenrikj, on 2011-May-05, 11:26, said:
You actually think that the official guide on how to interpret the laws from the WBF LC is wrong? Why don't you just give up and admit you are wrong. This is the law and doing anything else as director is absolutely wrong.
It is not official [whoops, I think Frances already made this point]. It is an unofficial guide by the Chairman of the WBFLC.
dburn, on 2011-May-05, 22:33, said:
What worries me about all this is that in Ton's example, where the auction has been 1♠-2♥-1NT... oops, 2NT, West is apparently allowed to know that his partner has not seen the overcall, rather than that his partner has pulled the 1NT card by mistake when he intended to pull the 2NT card. Under what Law is West entitled to this information?
He isn't. That is UI. The insufficient bid, the TD's ruling, and the corrected bid are all AI [Law 16 does not apply]. But extraneous remarks and mannerisms are UI and are treated as normal under the UI Laws.