Posted 2012-May-09, 11:49
Jillybean, if all you wanted was agreement with your opinion, that's fine. I won't get into that issue.
However, if you want a real reason as to why, I think it's simply 'hysterical raisins' - i.e. that's just the way they decided to word it when they brought in face-down opening leads. There needs to be a point (well, there doesn't, really, but the lawmakers chose to put in a point) where the lead, even though not seen by anyone, has been made.
As for the UI from pulling a card, putting it back, taking another, vs. putting a lead face-down and pulling it back, to lead another - sure, that's the same, and the TD should be called on the UI, if you think it may be relevant. But that's *another issue* to whether the lead's been made and *is allowed to be* changed. We deal with UI all the time.
As a companion case, the ACBL has regulations on when a bid is made using bidding boxes. Much of the world thinks our regulation is hugely inappropriately friendly to the "bidder" (it was written that way to get people comfortable with bidding boxes. I think we can say now that everyone is at least as comfortable with boxes as with spoken bidding, and no longer do we need to be generous about "this new tool"; but it hasn't been considered important enough to change), and the UI implications from "that bid hasn't been made" are many and often. BUT - when it's in position X, even though everyone who was watching knows what it was, it wasn't made, and can be "changed", passing lots of UI; when it's in position Y, it was, and can't be changed save for "inadvertent call". Where the line is, is a matter of regulation or law.
If the TD, after questioning and perhaps seeing with demonstrations, judges that the original face-down card was led, then that's one case. If he (in this case) judges that it was not led, then it's another case. That's his job, and he does it to the best of his ability. Barring video replay of every table, and *lots* of niggling corner-case regulation, you're going to get that, and you're going to get "wrong" rulings occasionally (which look "obviously right" to the other side).
When I go to sea, don't fear for me, Fear For The Storm -- Birdie and the Swansong (tSCoSI)