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Complex discard system Open Pairs, New Orleans

#61 User is offline   zenko 

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Posted 2010-August-05, 14:28

You say" The directors DID ask me why I didn't ask about the 5. I explained that the answer about the 2 was so clear that it did not seem necessary. "

Well you did not really answer their question at all. The question was NOT: "Once you got the answer about the 2, why you did not ask about the 5 too?" (i.e. thats what you answered). The question was: "Why did you decide to ask first specifically about the meaning of 2, i.e. ignore the fact that the first discard is almost certainly way more informative and important?" On that question you did not provide an answer.

In 20+ years of playing bridge I do not recall anybody asking me about the meaning of the second discard unless they already knew the meaning of the first. Since you claim that you do not know the meaning of the first one, the only possible reason why would you ask about the 2 first is that you did not really notice which card he played on the trick before.
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#62 User is offline   Pict 

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Posted 2010-August-05, 14:29

I see the point but without sympathy.

OP can't be bothered when the opponents play a different set of agreements - commonplace and not complicated.

Then much later he blah blah.

If I had been OP I'd have taken my licks.
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#63 User is offline   PrinceNep 

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Posted 2010-August-05, 14:40

Zenko,

You are right that the situation is unusual to ask about the second discard and not the first. It may be that declarer missed the first discard. This does NOT, however, relieve the opponents from accurately describing what the 2 shows. This is taking advantage through deceit, which is unlawful.

Had the opponent given the correct explanation as to what the second discard meant, but said nothing in regards to the 5, then all would seem fine. My example earlier was if someone asked what the 2 is I would say "count", as our first discard is lavinthal and all remainder discards are count in the suit discarded.

If declarer next asked what the 5 meant, I would explain our methods thoroughly without referencing specific spot cards.

By letting the opponents get away with this, you are condoning that there are "legitimate times to deceive the declarer with a misexplanation". There is no other way around this argument.
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#64 User is offline   Humper 

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Posted 2010-August-05, 18:07

zenko, on Aug 5 2010, 03:28 PM, said:

You say" The directors DID ask me why I didn't ask about the 5. I explained that the answer about the 2 was so clear that it did not seem necessary. "

Well you did not really answer their question at all. The question was NOT: "Once you got the answer about the 2, why you did not ask about the 5 too?" (i.e. thats what you answered). The question was: "Why did you decide to ask first specifically about the meaning of 2, i.e. ignore the fact that the first discard is almost certainly way more informative and important?" On that question you did not provide an answer.

In 20+ years of playing bridge I do not recall anybody asking me about the meaning of the second discard unless they already knew the meaning of the first. Since you claim that you do not know the meaning of the first one, the only possible reason why would you ask about the 2 first is that you did not really notice which card he played on the trick before.

It doesn't really matter if you can or cannot conceive of a reason why I asked about the 2. Frankly, I don't understand why the directors asked me that at all. I asked a question and was lied to. They could have answered using the generic ad truthful style I suggested.

Instead, they lied to me while I was declaring and I took a losing line based on their lie. I don't think the line is unreasonably bad. It's certainly not nullo. Frankly, considering how many high cards I was missing, I'm not sure I would have believed them if I had asked about the 5 and been told (truthfully) that it showed a club honor, since that would place the overcaller with, well, the hand she overcalled with.

I could have asked a different question. Why does the existence of a superior question give the opponents the right to lie about the inferior one? Keep in mind that the person looking at kx of spades in the slot was the one who said "it shows a spade honor". It is impossible that she didn't know this answer could screw declarer.

Again, i ask, where in the laws does it say that if a better question exists than the one actually asked, the opponents may lie to declarer without consequence even if they know their lie was likely to cause declarer to go wrong?
He's showing a four-by-five... with a three-card-suit... sometimes.
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#65 User is offline   bluejak 

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  Posted 2010-August-05, 18:34

A player was asked a question. He lied and gave an answer that he knew would be misleading.

Please explain to me, Pict and zenko, why anything that the non-offending side did, however silly, gives this player the right to gain from his lies and misleading answers?
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#66 User is offline   MickyB 

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Posted 2010-August-05, 19:10

David -

Say you were the director in this sort of situation, and due to your knowledge of the players involved, you suspected that an experienced declarer was trying to take advantage of the low-standard opposition, who may have -

forgotten the first discard

not known that a second discard could mean something, and struggled to understand the question

suspected declarer of having missed the first discard, and not known how to deal with the situation


Would you really allow declarer to get away with this sort of sharp practice, and penalise the defenders on top of this? Even if you saw the same declarer pull the same trick more than once?
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#67 User is offline   gerry 

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Posted 2010-August-05, 20:37

Hijack Alert...

When I get this type of...

"first low odd shows blah, high red even shows blah, later low prime shows reverse blah blah blah....."

I usually just think 'morons' and ignore it as anyone who plays this will probably f&^% up later anyway.

However (and here is the hijack) it does annoy me that these idiots are allowed to play this sort of ***** when I'm not allowed to open 2 multi.
With some the word liberty may mean for each man to do as he pleases with himself, and the product of his labor; while with others the same may mean for some men to do as they please...with the product of other men's labor.

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#68 User is offline   bluejak 

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  Posted 2010-August-06, 06:24

In all situations, Micky, my actual ruling at the table depends on all the facts. So, change the facts, change the ruling.

But I am not sure that I think your scenario likely at all, nor do I worry too muh about it Maybe this declarer does indulge in sharp practice: maybe he does try to take advantage. Ok, I can deal with him at another time. But if he was lied to on this occasion, the fact that he is a rogue does not give his opponents the right to cheat.

Ok, Gerry, and I think it disgraceful that I am not allowed to drive at 90 mph on a British motorway while players in South Africa are allowed to play reverse signals. Just as relevant.
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#69 User is offline   mycroft 

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Posted 2010-August-06, 10:11

Ugh. This is getting ugly.

I was going to reply to "those who believe there shouldn't be a penalty" that "nobody believes that". Then, I see people believing that. Ick.

Barmar - too much posting, not enough reading. Oops.

Humper - what happened to you was despicable, and I hope that at least adjustment for E/W and PP to East was applied (as I said at the beginning, and is still true, I haven't looked at the hand enough to decide whether I would recommend adjustment for N/S. That doesn't mean I wouldn't, just that I haven't done the work).

And those who don't have sympathy with choosing not to try to understand their crazy discarding system in a pre-alert in a two-board round (where we might be defending both hands), especially when we know we can get the relevant part of the agreement when we ask (anything, it doesn't have to be the right question), I'll be happy to play EHAA against you for the two-board round. Especially since I hear that the BoD have decided to drop the mandatory pre-Alert for EHAA two-bids (well, for very weak pre-empts), in exchange for an Alert. After all, that's effectively what happened anyway. "10-12 NT all seats, all vulnerabilities, insanely weak preempts, and our 2 bids are wildly variable in playing strength (could be very weak, could be very strong)." "You'll just Alert that when it happens, right?" "(well, we don't have to, technically, but) Of course (, anything else would be totally unfair)". Of course, I won't lie about 2H!-2s!; 3C! when you ask about 3C.
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#70 User is offline   Pict 

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Posted 2010-August-06, 16:01

bluejak, on Aug 5 2010, 07:34 PM, said:

A player was asked a question. He lied and gave an answer that he knew would be misleading.

Please explain to me, Pict and zenko, why anything that the non-offending side did, however silly, gives this player the right to gain from his lies and misleading answers?

Just said I saw the point without sympathy.

Rule as you please.

Someone commented on lack of TD calls on play rather than bidding. Careful what you wish for.
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#71 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2010-August-06, 22:17

Humper, on Aug 5 2010, 01:59 PM, said:

Note that this answer has nothing to do with whether or not the 6 itself is low or high, nor whether it is partners first discard.

I had a partner who would explain "If it's a low card, then...; if it's high, then..." when the card in question was a 2. :)

#72 User is offline   mycroft 

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Posted 2010-August-08, 16:18

barmar, on Aug 6 2010, 10:17 PM, said:

Humper, on Aug 5 2010, 01:59 PM, said:

Note that this answer has nothing to do with whether or not the 6 itself is low or high, nor whether it is partners first discard.
I had a partner who would explain "If it's a low card, then...; if it's high, then..." when the card in question was a 2. :D
"Sorry partner, it was the highest spade I could afford. I was hoping you'd be able to work it out."
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#73 User is offline   MFA 

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Posted 2010-August-08, 16:42

I'm having qualms about making bombastic claims about this one. I would very much like to hear from the director(s), since all we have is a one-sided testimony from the guy that was ruled against. :D

But it is illegal to lie about your agreements. That much is very clear.
Michael Askgaard
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#74 User is offline   zenko 

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Posted 2010-August-14, 16:28

Humper, on Aug 5 2010, 07:07 PM, said:

zenko, on Aug 5 2010, 03:28 PM, said:

You say" The directors DID ask me why I didn't ask about the 5. I explained that the answer about the 2 was so clear that it did not seem necessary. "

Well you did not really answer their question at all. The question was NOT: "Once you got the answer about the 2, why you did not ask about the 5 too?" (i.e. thats what you answered). The question was: "Why did you decide to ask first specifically about the meaning of 2, i.e. ignore the fact that the first discard is almost certainly way more informative and important?" On that question you did not provide an answer.

In 20+ years of playing bridge I do not recall anybody asking me about the meaning of the second discard unless they already knew the meaning of the first. Since you claim that you do not know the meaning of the first one, the only possible reason why would you ask about the 2 first is that you did not really notice which card he played on the trick before.

It doesn't really matter if you can or cannot conceive of a reason why I asked about the 2. Frankly, I don't understand why the directors asked me that at all. I asked a question and was lied to. They could have answered using the generic ad truthful style I suggested.

Instead, they lied to me while I was declaring and I took a losing line based on their lie. I don't think the line is unreasonably bad. It's certainly not nullo. Frankly, considering how many high cards I was missing, I'm not sure I would have believed them if I had asked about the 5 and been told (truthfully) that it showed a club honor, since that would place the overcaller with, well, the hand she overcalled with.

I could have asked a different question. Why does the existence of a superior question give the opponents the right to lie about the inferior one? Keep in mind that the person looking at kx of spades in the slot was the one who said "it shows a spade honor". It is impossible that she didn't know this answer could screw declarer.

Again, i ask, where in the laws does it say that if a better question exists than the one actually asked, the opponents may lie to declarer without consequence even if they know their lie was likely to cause declarer to go wrong?

Of course you opponent deserve score adjustment plus 30 lashes with wet whip, I think everybody who wrote in this tread agrees with that, so please do not equate my reluctance do give you adjusted score with me having any sympathy to your slimy opponent and his action.

To decide do you deserve a better score I first need to know something that you so fair failed to clarify: did you or did you not catch what card your opponent played on the trick before?

If you did, then you get your adjustment and a lecture about the proper way to ask such questions. If you did not, you will not get your adjustment, and you will get either stern warning (in case you did not do it on purpose, which I tend to believe happened), or if I have grounds to think you did it on purpose (unlikely, but not impossible) you will get your disciplinary committee hearing scheduled right after your opponent's.
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#75 User is offline   barryallen 

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Posted 2010-August-15, 10:30

bluejak, on Aug 5 2010, 07:34 PM, said:

A player was asked a question. He lied and gave an answer that he knew would be misleading.

Please explain to me, Pict and zenko, why anything that the non-offending side did, however silly, gives this player the right to gain from his lies and misleading answers?

The problem that you have seriously over looked, is that no unfair advantage shall be denied or gained from such a question. By asking regarding the S2, there is no knowledge declarer remembers the S5.

Let's say declarer has forgotten the discard of the S5, is it right for a defender to have to clarify with, "on it's own it means nothing, but in combination with the first discard it implies ......." Just the statement "on it's own it means nothing" is enough to trigger the memory banks?

I really dislike people being accused of lying when they are responding correctly to the question asked. If a further question had been asked regarding the two discards, then the defender should have laid out the various combinations depending upon whether the card was high, low, odd or even. They have no obligation to mention it was the 5, or the fact the second discard has definition combined with the first discard, when asked solely about the later.

What would have been better was for the defence to hand over their notes on discards, high lighting the relevant section. Or even declarer looking at the notes. What I should add is what position do you take if the defender asked, forgets the play of the S5. Very unlikely I know, but if that was given as a defence, just explain how that hurdle is going to be cleared.
bridge is never always a game of exact, for those times it's all about percentages, partner and the opponents.
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#76 User is online   blackshoe 

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Posted 2010-August-15, 11:29

Hand over their notes? It's highly unlikely they had system notes at the table, and they may not have had them at all.

The principle of full disclosure holds that when a question is asked, all relevant information is given, whether specifically requested or not. Players can't hide behind "he only asked about the 2" here, since the prior play of the five is certainly relevant.
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#77 User is offline   barryallen 

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Posted 2010-August-15, 11:50

blackshoe, on Aug 15 2010, 12:29 PM, said:

Hand over their notes? It's highly unlikely they had system notes at the table, and they may not have had them at all.

The principle of full disclosure holds that when a question is asked, all relevant information is given, whether specifically requested or not. Players can't hide behind "he only asked about the 2" here, since the prior play of the five is certainly relevant.

Then how does the TD proceed, when the defender asked, claims he cannot remember the play of the S5? Just answer that one simple question!

As far as I am concerned, if there is nothing written which the declarer can refer to when asked, they are fried!
bridge is never always a game of exact, for those times it's all about percentages, partner and the opponents.
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#78 User is online   blackshoe 

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Posted 2010-August-15, 14:39

There's a difference between concealing something relevant, and not remembering that it happened. As to "they're fried", the law is

Law 84D said:

The director rules any doubtful point in favor of the non-offending side. He seeks to restore equity. if in his judgment it is probable that a non-offending side has been damaged by an irregularity for which these Laws provide no rectification, he adjusts the score (see Law 12).
But before he gets to that point, he needs to determine the relevant facts.

This pair have a complex carding system. If they can't remember it, they're going to do poorly on defense. OTOH, if they do remember it, they have an obligation to fully explain it, or the relevant parts of it, when asked. On balance, I think the TD should start from the premise they haven't forgotten it, collect whatever evidence he can, and decide on the basis of that evidence whether the premise is likely to be valid. If there's no written system notes, then the TD has to rely on what other evidence — system cards, verbal statements — he can collect. Lack of such written evidence is not cause, of itself, to rule against them.

If a defender, when asked, says he can't remember what card his partner played earlier, the TD will treat it as a doubtful point in the context of Law 85D. Simple question, simple answer. ;)
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