lamford, on 2013-January-27, 11:19, said:
If the intention of the Laws were that "any" was always deemed to mean "any", then why would there be any clause "unless the declarer's intention is incontrovertible"? If declarer said "spade" then that would be a low spade again "unless the declarer' intention is inconvertible". So, for better or for worse, the Laws allow declarer to say something completely different to his incontrovertible intention. With A3 opposite K2, how do you rule, if the suit is say spades, when declarer leads the two and says "any", "either", "spade", "heart", "play" or "king"? I think I rule that he plays the ace in all cases.
In the OP, declarer's intention to play an honour isn't incontrovertible. Analogously, suppose declarer, with
♠ JT8
in hand opposite
♠ Qxx
in dummy, leads a small
♠ from dummy and deliberately but carelessly plays
♠8 from hand, losing to LHO's
♠9. Should the director allow declarer to correct his mistake?
Declarer's intention is not incontrovertible in the A2 opposite K2 example. Again, most likely, declarer just made a careless mistake.
With difficulty, you can imagine contexts where declarer's intention might be incontrovertible or nearly so. For instance declarer, with
♠ xxx opposite dummy's
♠ AQJ, audibly soliloquises, "To make this I must first take the
♠ finesse". He immediately leads a small
♠ from hand and, when LHO follows low, says "any".