aguahombre, on 2013-November-13, 21:40, said:
... The question about what the heart nine meant was improper. Declarer should also know it is highly unlikely a competent defender will be helping him play the hand by playing true count or attitude against this slam....although he apparently was telling the truth...
ggwhiz, on 2013-November-14, 09:46, said:
I REALLY detest declarer asking a question about a particular card instead of carding agreements and wish it were illegal. Defending a slam where competent defenders find little reason to tell the truth (carding not agreements) especially at this point in the hand I believe the response to an inappropriate question is accurate...
blackshoe, on 2013-November-14, 10:12, said:
Any question, whatever the form, should elicit an answer about agreements. If someone asked me "what does that card mean?" I would explain our agreements and say nothing particular about the card in question. If my opp persisted in questioning the meaning of the specific card, I would call the director.
During the auction, asking about a particular
call may provide partner with unauthorised information. During the play, however, UI can't be a concern, when declarer asks about a
card. If you want to know the likely systemic significance of a particular card, in a particular context, why shouldn't you ask? The answer can be along the lines of "if that's a low card" it's encouraging" or "if that's partner's first discard it's Lavinthal; ortherwise reverse count".
Discovering defenders' style seems particularly important when playing a slam. Some defenders try to help each other with fairly honest carding, even when declarer may also benefit. But other defenders false-card like mad. Some defenders have an undeclared implicit understanding as to
when they "false-card" (in specific contexts, they
reverse their normal carding methods but, typically, only declarer is fooled).