Why do the hands remain revealed when a CLAIM is rejected?
#1
Posted 2020-December-07, 12:40
The hands remained visible to all for the remainder of the game.
That didn't seem fair at all.
Is that the way it's supposed to work?
#2
Posted 2020-December-07, 13:10
#3
Posted 2020-December-07, 20:01
smerriman, on 2020-December-07, 13:10, said:
But that doesn't happen if you play bridge at a table with physical cards. You just claim, and the opponents can reject or accept. If they reject, the game continues as before.
I don't understand why when someone claims on BBO, they suddenly have to show their hand and everyone's hand to the opponents, for the entire rest of the game.
#4
Posted 2020-December-07, 21:11
BBO was built well before then for a different audience, but the ability for different players to see different information online allows for many different aspects to face to face bridge (such as the concept of self-alerting).
Having the claimer's hand revealed the way it is online makes far more sense to me - if you don't want it to happen, just don't make bad claims.
#5
Posted 2020-December-08, 05:57
LCarey13, on 2020-December-07, 20:01, said:
I don't understand why when someone claims on BBO, they suddenly have to show their hand and everyone's hand to the opponents, for the entire rest of the game.
In a live game with a competent director, after a claim is disputed the director is called and the result is adjudicated. In no case does play continue under ACBL rules, and I suspect under any other regime.
This must be followed. To see why, what if a declarer claims with a two-way finesse. All he has to do is wait for the objection and hook the objecting player.
#6
Posted 2020-December-08, 09:57
In duplicate, there was (and is) never a case when "if rejected, the game continues as before". However, in the newest version of the Laws, the lawmakers decided to give in to the "just play it out people" and make what they always did legal (L68D2b). But - it requires the consent of all four players at the table. If I'm one of them (in real life, online tradition is a bit different), that will never happen - and as a TD (who clearly wants more work), I repeatedly state when asked "there is no case where it is to the advantage of all four players to let play continue. So don't suggest it, and don't agree to it". Note especially L68D2b(ii) - if you end up doing worse than what the TD would have given you, that's your tough luck. If you end up doing worse than the claim, that's *also* your tough luck.
Once somebody refuses to suggest, or refuses to accept, the offer to play on, we revert to the Law that has always been there (okay, in my lifetime, at least) that says the TD is summoned and adjudicates fairly (L70).
But remember, BBO was built before online organized duplicate games were a thing. So how to deal with claims when there is no Director to call? Well...
In rubber bridge, the 2014 (current) Laws state that when an Arbiter is available, effectively the 2007 Duplicate claim law applies. Otherwise (my emphasis):
Quote
BBO claim procedure (and tradition) outside of sanctioned tournaments is effectively to follow the rubber laws.
So, on BBO, in games where there is a Director, follow the Laws (either duplicate or rubber-with-Arbiter). In games where there is not a director, like random games on the casual server, follow the Rubber Laws - declarer shows his hand, defenders show their hands to each other (no reason not to when the option for declarer not to see them is available), and play it out, treating as you would someone shady in a rubber game a declarer who tries anything that looks like "claim, and if rejected, take the safety play/remember the trump out".
If your game chose to not follow the Laws before, by "just playing on, not showing your hand", well, now you know. Find out who convinced your game that declarer should have that advantage, and have him read the actual Laws, too.
#7
Posted 2020-December-08, 20:10
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#8
Posted 2020-December-08, 20:35
#9
Posted 2020-December-09, 02:44
bberris, on 2020-December-08, 05:57, said:
This must be followed. To see why, what if a declarer claims with a two-way finesse. All he has to do is wait for the objection and hook the objecting player.
This is not true under the 2017 laws and indeed was not entirely true under those introduced in 2007.
London UK
#10
Posted 2020-December-09, 17:18