Vampyr, on 2013-June-05, 03:44, said:
I like 25A, but I agree that many players and even directors don't understand what "inadvertent" means. About the "pause for thought" thing, though, I have never seen someone try to change their bid without taking action as soon as they have noticed the bid in front of them.
Here is the sequence of events I've seen several times. North opens 1
♠. East bids 3
♥. South bids 2
♠. West waits about twenty seconds and then calls the director. South looks down at the table and notices for the first time that East bid 3
♥. He makes some comment indicating surprise ("Oops!") and immediately tries to change his call to 3
♠. Director arrives and asks if South intended to bid only 2
♠. South indicates that of course he wanted to bid 3
♠. West states that he would like to accept the original 2
♠ bid, but the director rules under 25A that South's 2
♠ call was inadvertent, the correction was without pause for thought (because South evidently wasn't thinking during the twenty seconds of West's pause, and anyway the pause for thought timer only starts once South notices his insufficient call, which clearly wasn't until West called the director). Thus south can correct to 3
♠ without penalty, and West is denied the opportunity to accept the insufficient bid. The auction continues with a pass from West and now North amazingly finds a pass on a hand where most would bid 4
♠ over a "normal" competitive 3
♠ raise. Nine tricks make exactly. At the end of the hand, West calls the director again to complain, but the director says that there was no UI (since 25A does not specify that the insufficient bid is unauthorized information) so... good judgment, North!
Compare to a situation where West is on lead. He tries to pull a card from his hand, but the card next to it falls out and lands face up on the table. West immediately tries to pick it up, but the director is called by South. Despite the fact that West certainly did not intend to play this card (in fact he was in the process of leading another card), the director rules that the card is face up on the table and thus "played."
Why such a different ruling?
Adam W. Meyerson
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit