VixTD, on 2014-October-08, 07:21, said:
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?
I think the TD can assign a likely meaning* for the insufficient bid without investigating the intended meaning.
We imagine the insufficient bid was made in one of the following auctions
- Opponent's previous bid was a pass
- Offender's suit bid out-ranked the opponent's bid
- Partner's previous bid was a level lower
- Offender's bid was a level higher
If these plausible alternatives give similar meaning for the insufficient bid, this is the meaning the TD should ascribe.
If the plausible alternatives give wildly different meanings for the insufficient bid, the TD should decide there is no likely meaning.
* Assuming a re-formulation of Law 27 in terms of "likely meaning", "apparent meaing" or even "information conveyed" by the insufficient bid.
This post has been edited by RMB1: 2014-October-08, 11:40