pran, on 2014-March-02, 12:53, said:
The way I understand Law 74 it is absolutely unacceptable to in any way influence an opponent to commit an irregularity, neither directly nor as a consequence of another irregularity.
Apparently you do not understand this.
A) Where in Law 74 does it say this? A? B? C?
Again, you're understanding things that aren't there.
I asked you to please refer to a Law that says that it is forbidden to allow an opponent from committing an irregularity. I even accommodated you by saying that
any irregularity will do (not just "all irregularities" or the specific irregularity of leading out of turn). The only thing you do is refer to a law that doesn't say a word about any of this this, but you "understand" it that way, anyway.
B) Where do you get the idea that a player who
waits (i.e. is doing nothing at all) influences an opponent to commit an irregularity?
Certainly, he is not preventing him from committing an irregularity. But not preventing someone to do something is very different from influencing him to do something.
This should be fairly clear.
Now Gnasher is making an honest attempt at trying to find such a law:
gnasher, on 2014-March-02, 13:38, said:
I think it's illegal under Law 73D2: "A player may not attempt to mislead an opponent by means of ... the haste or hesitancy of a call or play".
The article doesn't apply since it deals with "misleading an opponent". But declarer didn't mislead any opponent: The opponent had misled himself. All declarer does is refrain from setting the opponent straight and wait.
gnasher, on 2014-March-02, 13:38, said:
I think it's also illegal under Law 74C. 74C lists "examples" of things that are illegal. They're merely examples, so this is not a complete list. In a better world, the examples would be accompanied by a definition of what is illegal. As there is no such definition, the implication is that other things of a similar nature are also illegal.
Other than your first sentence, I fully agree. That is why I accommodated Pran by accepting
any example that was similar. The problem is that there is no example whatsoever in Law 74 that says, suggests or even implies that a player is supposed to prevent his opponents' irregularities, not about irregularities in general, not about leading out of turn, not about revoking, nor making an insufficient bid, nothing.
Rik
I want my opponents to leave my table with a smile on their face and without matchpoints on their score card - in that order.
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the new discoveries, is not “Eureka!” (I found it!), but “That’s funny…” – Isaac Asimov
The only reason God did not put "Thou shalt mind thine own business" in the Ten Commandments was that He thought that it was too obvious to need stating. - Kenberg