gordontd, on 2013-July-18, 04:14, said:
That's the bit I'm questioning (as has at least one other contributor earlier in the thread), unless he said something like "two good clubs, then two good trumps".
Players often list their tricks, not in the order they need to play them, when making a claim. We don't hold them to playing in that order unless it's clear that's what they meant, and equally we shouldn't give them the benefit of playing them in that order unless it's clear that's what they meant.
Quote
Law 68C: A claim should be accompanied at once by a clear statement as to the order in which cards will be played, of the line of play or defense through which the claimer proposes to win the tricks claimed.
The original statement given was "two good clubs, two good diamonds". You say it's not a clear statement. Fair enough. But at the table the TD can and should investigate what the claimer meant.
VixTD, on 2013-July-18, 07:25, said:
I think folks who want to award only one trick to the defence are ignoring "any doubtful point as to a claim shall be resolved against the claimer". Do you really believe that the claimer was aware that there was a high club out, and made no mention of it, or that the defence would get a trick?
I don't really understand the uses of "irrational" and "careless" when referring to claimer's proposed lines of play. What's careless is forgetting that the club queen has not yet been played. Given that that's been missed, any line of play is normal, careful, sensible, rational.
I want to investigate and find out what really happened and what the claimer meant when he stated "two good clubs, two good diamonds". I can't (we don't have access to all the players). I will concede that on the limited information available the statement appears to be ambiguous, and therefore the "any doubtful point" clause comes into play. So as long as this is all the information we have, I'll change my ruling in this case to "losing two tricks". But I'm still not convinced we know what was actually said, or what the claimer intended.
I have partners for whom forgetting that a particular card has or has not been played is not at all careless - it's their usual situation. However, we're told the claimer here is "a decent player" so he probably doesn't fall into that class.
WellSpyder, on 2013-July-18, 09:19, said:
Bluejak is usually BBO's most persistent mocker of the concept of protecting the field, but he hasn't been posting as much recently as he used to. I'm not sure anyone else really thinks rulings should be influenced by protecting the field, either, though.
I certainly don't.