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Re-interpretation of Law 25A was: Explained alert alerts North that her bid was "unintended

#41 User is offline   paulg 

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Posted 2011-September-10, 05:22

View Postshintaro, on 2011-September-09, 03:14, said:

View PostStevenG, on 2011-September-09, 02:03, said:

If we forced those players out of the local clubs, they would all be down to two tables. The vast majority of duplicate bridge played is played for social reasons, not competitive, and the laws reflect that.

mmmm Steven do you actually think the Law Makers or Proponents of Care about CLUB bridge ;)

I know this was tongue in cheek, but the ACBL and the EBU are two organisations that I often feel put club bridge on a par with, if not ahead of, tournament bridge when considering their regulations. My feeling is that the SBU is more focused on the tournament game in this regard.

On topic, I will say that the club players really hate, because they get confused, being able to change a bidding card but not a played card unless they are declarer and misspeak. Consistency across 'played cards' and 'bids made' would be easier for club players to handle.
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#42 User is offline   bluejak 

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Posted 2011-September-11, 07:58

View PostVampyr, on 2011-September-09, 07:07, said:

So if the bidding card one bid above your intended one is stuck to the bidding card of your intended bid, you would not allow a player to snatch it off the top? This seems a bit harsh.

Yeah, sure. And if you make the wrong response to Blackwood, realise, and wish to change it, it is a bit harsh not to allow you to change it. If you lead the fourth highest, realise you are playing third and lowest, and want to change it, it is a bit harsh not to allow it.

It is a ridiculous argument. The whole incredible approach to allowing mistakes to be changed comes from silly laws over the years. If the Laws said once you had done something you were stuck with it and players were used to that no-one would have a problem, and people would take more care. Everyone would take it as normal, even if they only played for social reasons, only played competitively, or if they, like the 95%+ majority, play for both.
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#43 User is offline   mjj29 

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Posted 2011-September-11, 08:14

View Postbluejak, on 2011-September-11, 07:58, said:

Yeah, sure. And if you make the wrong response to Blackwood, realise, and wish to change it, it is a bit harsh not to allow you to change it. If you lead the fourth highest, realise you are playing third and lowest, and want to change it, it is a bit harsh not to allow it.

There's a clear difference between 'making the wrong call/play' and 'trying to make the right call, but the equipment in use is shoddy'. As has been suggested above we would at least need to accompany such change with the EBU changing to the ACBL's bidding box regulations to give people at least some chance of making the call they want to (either that or we are holding clubs to a much higher standard of bidding box maintenance than they currently are).
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#44 User is offline   blackshoe 

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Posted 2011-September-11, 08:15

And yet, David, you would allow a player who clearly stated in his claim statement that he would play on diamonds and then finesse in clubs to change that to "play on clubs and then finesse in diamonds" when he held AQ and AKQT. "He just made a bad clam statement: the claim was fine," you said. How is a claim statement different from the other actions you mentioned? Yes, I know it's not an actual call or play, that's not the point — it's an action taken by a player in the course of playing a hand, so why should it be treated differently? Note that I'm not saying it should be treated the same; I agreed with your ruling of 13 tricks to declarer.
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#45 User is offline   bluejak 

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Posted 2011-September-11, 09:59

One of my comments was in a thread in Changing Laws & Regulations, one was not. One was based on what I think the Laws should be, one is based on what I think the Laws are. There's no comparison.

And I think the idea that the equipment is poor as a reason for having poor Laws is dreadful. Get the Laws right, and let the organisers get the equipment right. Anyway, I don't believe it really: I have played with some awful bidding boxes, and to me that is no excuse whatever for making a mistake. My mistakes should be my responsibility. Perhaps we live in a namby-pamby world. :)
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#46 User is offline   shyams 

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Posted 2011-September-11, 10:24

View Postbluejak, on 2011-September-06, 16:35, said:

As to the whole approach I think that once a call is made or a play designated it should not be changeable. But it would be a major change in thinking. What happens now is that because so many changes are allowed players expect to change everything. They play the A, change their mind, and are shocked you do not allow the change.

I think this is a very good suggestion.

However, the EBU bidding box regulation reads that a call is "considered to have been made when it has been removed from the bidding box". To address the issue of sticky bidding cards and other dexterity issues, Law 25A can be limited to an erroneous pull out of the box provided
either this clause -- the call is not yet "held face up, touching or nearly touching the table"
or this clause -- in is not yet "possible for his partner to see the face of the call"
or the first clause when playing with screens and the second without screens.
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#47 User is offline   Coelacanth 

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Posted 2011-September-13, 15:36

Here's a real-life example from the other night which may help to muddy these waters further.

ACBL club game, bidding boxes in use, we had the following auction with South dealer:



South, my partner on this auction, is in his late 70's and is prone to 'senior moments'. In particular, he is somewhat awkward in the handling of bidding cards. For example, he frequently replaces them in the bidding box upside down or out of sequence; I normally have to 'straighten out' his bidding box at least once per session.

In the passout chair in the given auction, he bid 5NT.

This might be termed an "obvious" mechanical error. Clearly there is no bridge hand which would bid only 2 and pass over 4 that could bid 5NT here. Once apprised of the mistake by the opponents, he made a 25A correction to 5, I made 5 and nobody gave the incident with the bid cards any further thought (until I made this post, obviously).

Some in this thread have advocated for an "all bids stand as made" approach, disallowing ANY change of an unintended call, even one as obviously inadvertent as the example given above.

I think this is too extreme a position. Certainly, if I were EW, I would not want to "earn" a top board by forcing my opponents to play 5NT on this auction. On the other hand, allowing a change on this auction forces TDs (who are not generally present at the table during the original auction) to make judgments about "was this call unintended?" and "was there a pause for thought?". Clearly some lines must be drawn somewhere, but I don't see how TDs can be expected to rule consistently given the current wording of L25.

Does it make sense to separate the "unintended" and "pause for thought" components of the law? So you might, for example, permit any change of an "obviously" unintended call regardless of any pause for thought. (This would require a perhaps-impossible-to-formulate objective definition of "obviously"). Or you might alternately allow any immediate change and not require any standard of intention.

One thing I do think is clear is that the Laws should incorporate strict and (very probably) different guidelines for bidding boxes vs spoken vs written bidding and/or screens vs not.
Brian Weikle
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#48 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2011-September-14, 14:18

While we should be accomodating to people with physical infirmities, I think they also need to take some personal responsibility. Surely he can't be oblivious to the fact that he has a hard time handling bidding cards. So he should be extra careful about checking that the cards he's putting down are the ones he intended, he shouldn't wait for the opponents to inform him of his likely mistake.

BTW, at the risk of starting another tangent about terminology, I think most people associate "senior moment" with mental lapses, not problems of physical dexterity, despite the fact that aging tends to bring on both.

#49 User is offline   aguahombre 

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Posted 2011-September-14, 14:43

View Postbarmar, on 2011-September-14, 14:18, said:

BTW, at the risk of starting another tangent about terminology, I think most people associate "senior moment" with mental lapses, not problems of physical dexterity, despite the fact that aging tends to bring on both.

I don't think anyone would argue that point. Senior moments, even when they happen to juniors, refer to non-correctable mistakes.
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#50 User is offline   Coelacanth 

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Posted 2011-September-14, 15:15

View Postaguahombre, on 2011-September-14, 14:43, said:

I don't think anyone would argue that point. Senior moments, even when they happen to juniors, refer to non-correctable mistakes.

I should have been more clear...prone to 'senior moments' AND issues handling the bidding cards.
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