jdonn, on Aug 3 2010, 04:22 PM, said:
I read the first sentence and it's wrong, the problem is trivial.
Maybe.
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Declarer asked a question.
The defenders merely have to answer the exact question declarer asked.
Absolutely and by the letter of the regulation incorrect (at least where you and I play); and for very good reasons. The defenders are required, whatever the question asked, to provide full disclosure.
Apart from everything else that goes along with it (because most of the time we have issues between "answering the question asked" and "providing full disclosure", it's because the answering side is trying to hide *systemic information* by "answer[ing] the exact question asked"), where does it end?
"What does that show?"
"Meaningless."
"No, seriously, what does that show?"
"That he thinks that is a safe card to pitch."
"But what about all of that crazy discarding system that you talked about earlier?"
"doesn't apply to this play."
"Why not?"
...okay, so do I have to answer this question? Is "all of that applied to a previous trick" an "answer to the exact question declarer asked"? If I do have to answer that question, or the obvious next one, or have to say "he's shown a club card with his previous plays, this card doesn't mean anything", does that mean I can ask the same series of questions of the pair tonight that play standard discards when I can't remember whether the first discard was the D9 or D2? Now, if declarer asks "what did the spade 5 show?", I'm happy (and required) to tell him.
I see nothing wrong, bluejak aside, with the answer "standard signals, revolving Lavinthal on the first discard, further discards 'as possible'", provided the opponents understand revolving Lavinthal (and if not, I'll happily explain that). If the players playing the "complex discarding system" can't explain it with that kind of simple response, then they have to come up with some way to do it that is complete, correct, and not misinforming. If they can't do that without providing information that declarer might have forgotten about, well, sucks to be them, doesn't it?
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They intentionally gave a false answer to what he asked.
It couldn't be any more trivial.
Oh, true, true, that couldn't be more trivial. I have no sympathy whatever for what E/W actually did.