Insufficient 1C opening
#61
Posted 2014-October-07, 09:18
The real problems, IMO, come when we have to determine what the offender thought he was bidding over when he makes the insufficient bid.
When it goes (2D) 2C..was our dolt bidding over 1D? Did he think he was opening 2C? Even then, if only the TD knows the answer to this, the replacement call if a subset of the IB as intended can probably be allowed. Partner of the offender should just not strain himself to figure out why the IB occurred and proceed.
#62
Posted 2014-October-07, 15:15
gordontd, on 2014-October-07, 00:52, said:
Yes, I know about the trend. I didn't like the changes to the revoke law either.
#63
Posted 2014-October-07, 15:24
jeffford76, on 2014-October-07, 15:15, said:
I didn't like them either when they were first announced, because I thought they would produce a lot more Law 64C cases. In practice that doesn't seem to have happened, which suggests to me that the law-makers got it about right.
London UK
#64
Posted 2014-October-07, 15:34
barmar, on 2014-October-04, 20:19, said:
Not for this LC minute. To remind you, the Law in question says:
Quote
[footnote: * the meaning of (information available from) a call is the knowledge of what it shows and what it excludes. ]
If there had been any intention to permit the so-called 'liberal interpretation' then the people who wrote the original Law would not have written "the same meaning* as, or a more precise meaning*", nor would they have followed this up with the clarification "(such meaning being fully contained within the possible meanings of the insufficient bid)".
#65
Posted 2014-October-07, 15:51
VixTD, on 2014-October-06, 07:15, said:
When the 2007 laws came into force with the addition of replacement calls with a similar meaning it became standard practice (in the EBU at least) to ask the offender in private what they intended by the insufficient bid, and use that as the "meaning" in the context of law 27. But unless Vampyr and I are the only ones to have this difficulty I cannot understand why the law doesn't say so explicitly.
Havings read these forums over the last few years, I can confirm that Vampyr and you are certaintly not the only ones having this difficulty.
If the Law had actually said:
"has the same intended meaning* as, or a more precise intended meaning*
then the practice of asking the IBer what (s)he had intended would make sense.
As the Law is actually written, it would make more sense to ask the IBer's partner how (s)he had interpreted the IB in order to ascertain the information conveyed by (i.e. the meaning of) the IB.
#66
Posted 2014-October-07, 16:16
jeffford76, on 2014-October-07, 15:15, said:
When you wrote "changes" (plural) does that mean that you would prefer the original revoke Law as of 1932: Two tricks for the first revoke, one more trick for each subsequent revoke by the same side?
Note that there was no provision for compensation to NOS in case OS gained on the revoke(s) in spite of the penalty.
There are stories of (deliberate) revokes in order to establish a stopper in opponents' suit after which declarer won his 3NT contract with sufficient overtricks to pay the penalty and still have his 9 tricks. Culbertson shall have been asked if this could be correct, and answered: "Yes, that is the Law".
#67
Posted 2014-October-07, 16:20
jallerton, on 2014-October-07, 15:51, said:
If the Law had actually said:
"has the same intended meaning* as, or a more precise intended meaning*
then the practice of asking the IBer what (s)he had intended would make sense.
As the Law is actually written, it would make more sense to ask the IBer's partner how (s)he had interpreted the IB in order to ascertain the information conveyed by (i.e. the meaning of) the IB.
The Director is not supposed to be a mind-reader, he cannot tell what was the intended meaning of an insufficient bid.
But the Law instructs the Director to establish what in his opinion was the meaning of the insufficient bid, and that is obviously within his capabilities.
#68
Posted 2014-October-07, 16:23
barmar, on 2014-October-07, 08:43, said:
No. Because to judge the (unauthorised) information from the insufficient bid we have to judge what is suggested to (peers of) the offender's partner, which can be judged without having to address the nebulous concept of "meaning" of an insufficient bid, which current practice is equating with intended meaning.
"Robin Barker is a mathematician. ... All highly skilled in their respective fields and clearly accomplished bridge players."
#69
Posted 2014-October-07, 16:26
gordontd, on 2014-October-07, 15:24, said:
I have had very few cases where I had to apply 64C, but a lot*more cases where I had to study the hand to make sure it didn't apply.
To me following suit is so fundamental that it doesn't bother me if there is an automatic penalty if you don't do it (perhaps not accruing to the other side). I understand the lawmakers felt differently.
#70
Posted 2014-October-07, 16:27
pran, on 2014-October-07, 16:16, said:
Note that there was no provision for compensation to NOS in case OS gained on the revoke(s) in spite of the penalty.
There are stories of (deliberate) revokes in order to establish a stopper in opponents' suit after which declarer won his 3NT contract with sufficient overtricks to pay the penalty and still have his 9 tricks. Culbertson shall have been asked if this could be correct, and answered: "Yes, that is the Law".
I think this is quite an odd statement of what I might think merely because of the inclusion of an "s".
#71
Posted 2014-October-08, 01:45
pran, on 2014-October-07, 16:16, said:
Note that there was no provision for compensation to NOS in case OS gained on the revoke(s) in spite of the penalty.
There are stories of (deliberate) revokes in order to establish a stopper in opponents' suit after which declarer won his 3NT contract with sufficient overtricks to pay the penalty and still have his 9 tricks. Culbertson shall have been asked if this could be correct, and answered: "Yes, that is the Law".
jeffford76, on 2014-October-07, 16:27, said:
Well, there has been many changes in the revoke laws over the years, and the original laws had the advantage of being consistent and easy to apply.
It wouldn't surprise me if those were your favourites.
Each later version has included some kind of complication in order to seem more reasonable for both sides.
#72
Posted 2014-October-08, 07:21
pran, on 2014-October-06, 08:15, said:
It should not be difficult to understand that this means the Director must make up his own mind as best he can, based on the circumstances and available facts, and judge whether or not the relevant conditions are satisfied.
Grattan's advice appears very sensible to me. (Very seldom have I needed to take the player away from the table and ask him what he really meant.)
This does not address the problem of how an insufficient bid can have a "meaning".
If the intention of the law is to use the offender's intended meaning, then the best way to find this out is to ask the player (away from the table, to avoid transmitting UI). If not, then on what basis should the director ascribe a meaning to it?
#73
Posted 2014-October-08, 10:35
pran, on 2014-October-08, 01:45, said:
It wouldn't surprise me if those were your favourites.
Each later version has included some kind of complication in order to seem more reasonable for both sides.
OK, to be clear, I think it is obvious that there always should be a return to equity for a revoke that gains more than the penalty. My preference is to have the default penalty be substantial enough that it hardly ever matters.
#74
Posted 2014-October-08, 11:35
Moderator: perhaps the thread-creep re revoke penalties/rectification can be carried on somewhere else as well.
"Robin Barker is a mathematician. ... All highly skilled in their respective fields and clearly accomplished bridge players."
#75
Posted 2014-October-08, 15:12
jeffford76, on 2014-October-08, 10:35, said:
And as far as I can guess that was the first amendment made to the revoke laws.
#76
Posted 2014-October-08, 16:59
jeffford76, on 2014-October-08, 10:35, said:
Yes, two tricks if two are available. Easy.
#77
Posted 2014-October-11, 16:56