weejonnie, on 2015-July-21, 03:00, said:
Certainly - otherwise we allow the change - providing the player can persuade me that it was a mechanical error - such as a 4♥ response to Blackwood. Many players may not realise that the option is available and if we get a "... 4NT - 4♥ - Director" call quickly then there is probably a natural tendency not to try and correct the call. Just one more thing to check on.
I don't think you get my point. There are three different cases.
- The player thinks he is responding to 1NT. Now the insufficient bid requires more strength or distribution than a 3♣ replacement call, so there is no 27B1b replacement available.
- The player realises partner opened 2NT, and intended to bid 3♣, but pulled the wrong card. This is a 25A case and opponents do not have the opportunity to accept 2♣.
- The player realises partner opened 2NT, and intended to bid Stayman, but something in his brain said "Stayman=2♣". This is not a 25A case, and opponents do have the opportunity to accept the IB. If they don't, a 3♣ replacement shows exactly the same hands (because he was always trying to bid Stayman over 2NT) and so is a 27B1b replacement.
In my experience, 3 is much more common than 1. In the case where another player draws attention to the 2♣, it is also much more common than 2, since in case 2 the player normally realises before the 2♣ card hits the table. I think the main advantage of the new rule over the old rule is that it has become much less crucial to work out whether 2 or 3 actually applies. (As I said earlier, in the EBU there is no difficulty distinguishing between 1 and 2/3, since announcements will make it clear what he thought the opening bid was.)