Taking advantage of a 'Law' situation is this ethical?
#1
Posted 2018-November-05, 05:17
With me in fourth seat, game all, the bidding went: Pass (pass) 1♠ (2♥) 1NT (!)....
Once I (who had bid the 2♥) alerted my LHO to the insufficient bid, she apologised and drew out a Pass card. It was a genuine mistake. Nevertheless I then called the TD because I felt we now needed a ruling. The TD correctly explained to me the options, and that it was down to me to choose.
Clearly the 'softest' option, for LHO to amend her bid to 2NT, wasn't on, presumably she had no heart stopper. I therefore opted to accept the 1NT bid effectively annulling my 2♥. My partner then bid 2♥ (probably the wrong thing to do) and the auction eventually ended with my RHO on 3♠.
This went 1 down which was a poor result for us seeing as we had at least a partscore in ♥ - and even a partscore would have been better than 100 pts. I know now that if I'd not accepted the 1NT, my RHO would have been prevented from bidding again and we could have bid our hearts without interference. That would have been deliberately exploiting the opponent's mistake, but so what?
So I later asked the TD if there was any chance of an adjustment, but subsequently retracted my appeal. At the end of the day, I decided it was my fault for accepting the 1NT - or my partner's...
Was I right? At least I think I have a clear conscience - at the cost of a poor result on the board.
#2
Posted 2018-November-05, 05:25
#3
Posted 2018-November-05, 05:47
661_Pete, on 2018-November-05, 05:17, said:
Once I (who had bid the 2♥) alerted my LHO to the insufficient bid, she apologised and drew out a Pass card. It was a genuine mistake. Nevertheless I then called the TD because I felt we now needed a ruling. The TD correctly explained to me the options, and that it was down to me to choose.
If this is what the TD said then that was not a correct explanation of the options. It would be for your partner to choose and, because of the premature correction, the only options would be to accept the 1NT bid, or else for it to be replaced by the Pass of the premature correction, in which case the player's partner would be barred from bidding for the rest of the auction.
As Cyberyeti says, it's never unethical to call the director when there is an infraction -it's required.
In this case, an adjustment might subsequently have been given on the basis of Director's Error - Law 82C.
London UK
#5
Posted 2018-November-05, 09:06
#6
Posted 2018-November-05, 11:07
Cyberyeti, on 2018-November-05, 05:25, said:
Anyway, I'm decided on one thing: if this sort of thing happens again, so long as the TD give me a choice, I won't necessarily choose the 'soft' option . Lesson learnt!
#7
Posted 2018-November-05, 12:18
661_Pete, on 2018-November-05, 05:17, said:
It would have been accepting the redress that the law offers you when opponent makes this mistake, what is unethical about that?
Your RHO would have been prevented from bidding again, but not your LHO.
#8
Posted 2018-November-05, 13:31
No. Forget it, is just part of the game.
#9
Posted 2018-November-05, 14:31
steve2005, on 2018-November-05, 13:31, said:
No. Forget it, is just part of the game.
I would go further and say that it is one of the few occasions where offenders actually encounter a disincentive.
Often in bridge it's as if the opponents can do pretty much what they please and at most you can get their goal disallowed.
#10
Posted 2018-November-05, 14:38
What is baby oil made of?
#11
Posted 2018-November-05, 16:30
This same spirit is extended to the play as well.
The laws aren't perfect and thus open to exploitation. They are created with the assumption that those engaged in the game aren't malicious. The world has seen, within this decade, that that assumption was naïve.
That said, I do find it distasteful, unethical and damaging to the spirit of the game when players actively exploit the laws to gain something they haven't earned, won or deserved. The group of people I see do this regularly, in my area, as a whole, as if it is their right, are B players (desperate to gain status). Beginners, novices and happy C players are more often than not, blissfully ignorant. "Real" A players, experts and pro's, want to win on their own merits, not by capitalizing on non-tactical mistakes.
So I applaud your conscientiousness. The game needs more people who realize there is a line between where one is being a good sport and lawful and where one is exploiting the law un-sportingly.
My advice, regardless of anyone's advice that it is ethical and part of the game to always take advantage of peoples non-tactical offenses for your own gain, that you do so, or not, in accordance with your own conscience.
Surrendering to existential truth is the beginning of enlightenment.
#12
Posted 2018-November-06, 01:51
ggwhiz, on 2018-November-05, 14:38, said:
It's partner's decision whether to accept the insufficient bid, but it's any player's right to draw attention to an irregularity during the auction and then everyone's responsibility to call the TD.
London UK
#13
Posted 2018-November-06, 02:44
661_Pete, on 2018-November-05, 05:17, said:
With me in fourth seat, game all, the bidding went: Pass (pass) 1♠ (2♥) 1NT (!)....
Once I (who had bid the 2♥) alerted my LHO to the insufficient bid, she apologised and drew out a Pass card. It was a genuine mistake. Nevertheless I then called the TD because I felt we now needed a ruling. The TD correctly explained to me the options, and that it was down to me to choose.
Clearly the 'softest' option, for LHO to amend her bid to 2NT, wasn't on, presumably she had no heart stopper. I therefore opted to accept the 1NT bid effectively annulling my 2♥. My partner then bid 2♥ (probably the wrong thing to do) and the auction eventually ended with my RHO on 3♠.
This went 1 down which was a poor result for us seeing as we had at least a partscore in ♥ - and even a partscore would have been better than 100 pts. I know now that if I'd not accepted the 1NT, my RHO would have been prevented from bidding again and we could have bid our hearts without interference. That would have been deliberately exploiting the opponent's mistake, but so what?
So I later asked the TD if there was any chance of an adjustment, but subsequently retracted my appeal. At the end of the day, I decided it was my fault for accepting the 1NT - or my partner's...
Was I right? At least I think I have a clear conscience - at the cost of a poor result on the board.
The Laws of Bridge are an arcane mystery to many players and will continue to be so for a long time hence. Only experience will guide you in this field.
- Dr Tarrasch(1862-1934)German Chess Grandmaster
Bridge is a game where you have two opponents...and often three(!)
"Any palooka can take tricks with Aces and Kings; the true expert shows his prowess
by how he handles the two's and three's" - Mollo's Hideous Hog
#14
Posted 2018-November-06, 04:43
PhilG007, on 2018-November-06, 02:44, said:
The laws of Bridge and Local regulations should be amalgamated, purged, clarified, and drastically simplified. Even then directors and players would continue to have trouble with some rules (e.g. UI).
Bridge is a game where you have two opponents...and often three(! -- or four if you count yourself
#15
Posted 2018-November-06, 05:03
The other lesson to take from this is that, at Pairs, you often have to double if you think that you have bid to your last making contract, especially in a part score where opps are vulnerable. If you judge that 3 spades is going to be unusually high then you have to wield the axe. If the make, you may have turned 20% to zero, but if they go down you have converted 20% to 100%
At imp scoring obviously the situation is reversed.
#16
Posted 2018-November-06, 06:52
nige1, on 2018-November-06, 04:43, said:
Those who find this unthinkable or too difficult should look at how some other sports are catching up with the 21st century, for example
see this courageous experiment
#17
Posted 2018-November-06, 13:21
#18
Posted 2018-November-06, 13:35
msjennifer, on 2018-November-06, 13:21, said:
As I understand it, if you wish to make it impossible for them to bar partner from bidding then the only way to do this is to ACCEPT the insufficient bid. If you refuse it, and they replace with something other than lowest sufficient bid which specifies the same denomination(s), then their partner is barred.
#19
Posted 2018-November-06, 13:49
pescetom, on 2018-November-06, 13:35, said:
Sir,one must fully know whether the accepted insufficient bid is a conventional bid or not.In the given example a 1NT bid may be a conventional forcing bid if there was no 2H overcall.Whether you like it or not illegal information has already been passed by the 1NT bid.As also the 1NT bidders partner already knows that it was the intention to forbid him from bidding and so even holding a hand which deserved one more bid ,he will now pass having known the purpose of the insufficient bid.
#20
Posted 2018-November-06, 16:41
This particular option is the best one in the game. If I want to raise partners hearts without raising the level he bid at, I can accept the insufficient bid. If I want to make an overcall below partners bid, I can also accept. and If i don't, I get to make the opponents find a nearly equivalent bid or bar their partner.
As far as the ethics of accepting the insufficient bid go. You are at a tournament, consider the ethics of not playing to win and giving this opponent an unearned advantage.