Trinidad, on 2014-October-23, 17:58, said:
That minute is pretty clear. The example is pretty much exactly what we have here. So, I stand corrected.
Nevertheless, I think that if that is what they intended as the meaning of Law 50E, they should have rewritten it.
I also think that the minute is a strange contruction: For the purpose of selecting which suit to lead the penalty card is UI, but for selecting which card in that suit to lead it is AI. And this, we are supposed to be able to conclude from Law 50E, which doesn't mention any distinction between choosing suits and cards within suits.
Am I the only one who finds that odd?
Rik
No, you are not, In post #12 I said:
jallerton, on 2014-October-18, 02:34, said:
It seems to me that there are two possible interpretations here:
(a) If "Knowledge of the requirements for playing a penalty card" means that I am allowed to know partner has ♠Q then I can lead whatever I like; or
(b) If "Knowledge of the requirements for playing a penalty card" does not include allowing me to know partner has ♠Q then I must 'carefully avoid taking any advantage of the UI' (Law 73C) and 'may not choose from among logical alternatives one that could demonstrably have been suggested over another by the extraneous information' (Law 16B). In this case Law 73C tells me that I must not lead a low spade.
Whichever of (a) and (b) is supposed to apply, I can't see the relevance of whether or a not a top spade lead is the only logical alternative.
There was no equivalent of Law 50E in the 1997 Laws, and I assume that the 1998 WBF minute quoted by Campboy was intended to deal with that. Now that the penalty card UI/AI is dealt with in the 2007 Law 50E, the 1998 minute is superseded and we should be using the new Law 50E instead.
Reading another of the 2007 Laws, I now know why I prefer my interpretation (a) over interpretation (b). The answer lies in the Law immediately above:
Law 50D2 said:
When a defender has the lead while his partner has a major penalty card, he may not lead until declarer has stated which of the options below is selected (if the defender leads prematurely, he is subject to rectification under Law 49). Declarer may choose:
(a) to require* the defender to lead the suit of the penalty card, or to prohibit* him from leading that suit for as long as he retains the lead (for two or more penalty cards, see Law 51); if declarer exercises either of these options, the card is no longer a penalty card and is picked up.
(b) not to require or prohibit a lead, in which case the defender may lead any card; the penalty card remains a penalty card**. If this option is selected Law 50D continues to apply for as long as the penalty card remains.
Please note the part I have put in bold. It says "may lead any card". It does not say, for example, "may lead any card (subject to Law 50E2)".
So I think the Laws say this:
1. The player can lead any card (Law 50D2).
2. The fact that his partner holds
♠Q, and has to play it at the first legal opportunity, is authorised information (Law 50E1).
3. The fact that his partner is likely to hold
♠J (assuminng they lead top of sequence) and is unlikely to have an attractive sequence to lead from in another suit is unauthorised information (Law 50E2).
4. If the defence gained by this player knowing that his partner held
♠Q, we adjust the score to what might have happened had the penalty card not existed (Law 50E3). [Presumably a weighted score could be a possibility here - Law 12C1C.]
5. If the player fails to carefully avoid taking any advantage of the information about
♠J/attractivenesss of lead in other suits, then the TD may adjust the score under the general UI Laws (Laws 73C/12A1 and/or Laws 16B/12C].