Ethical Obligation claims
#1
Posted 2011-November-21, 08:50
1) Looking at my hand, I know there is no reasonable line where he can lose the trick, but it is technically possible for him to give it to us if he plays badly.
2) There is absolutely no order of cardplay where we can take any tricks. Even if he collides every honor and plays bottom up.
Never tell the same lie twice. - Elim Garek on the real moral of "The boy who cried wolf"
#2
Posted 2011-November-21, 09:52
My obligation on the second one would be to tell the declarer to score it up as taking all the tricks.
My obligation might not be everyone's.
#3
Posted 2011-November-21, 10:38
aguahombre, on 2011-November-21, 09:52, said:
This is not true. Your obligation under the Laws of Bridge is the same as anyone's. Your inclination might be different from some.
#4
Posted 2011-November-21, 10:40
Vampyr, on 2011-November-21, 10:38, said:
There I go again, with my literary license. Stefanie will always keep me in line. In this case I have a hunch my inclination and my obligation might be the same.
#5
Posted 2011-November-21, 10:51
Legal explanation. Your opponent has conceded the tricks to you. Under L71, those tricks are yours now, unless your opponent seeks to cancel the concession. So, given you are apparently certain about the outcomes, it would be unhelpful to contest the concession under L70, because that in effect says either "your concession was insufficiently generous to us" or "I do not know from the information I have whether this is a sufficiently generous concession, and I am contesting it to reveal the information". L70 is not a process for returning conceded tricks to the opposition. The only way he can retrieve those tricks is to cancel the concession under L71. The criterion for cancelling a concession means that the cancellation will very likely not be successful in the first case, but likely will be successful in the second case (L71(2)).
Edited to tighten the wording.
This post has been edited by iviehoff: 2011-November-21, 10:55
#6
Posted 2011-November-21, 10:56
if he has, and, for example, he says : conceding a heart, and his hearts are all good, then I point that out. But if his hearts were say 875 and he's obviously forgotten that all the higher ones have been played, and I have the stiff 6, then I accept the claim....if he thinks that the only heart outstanding is higher than the 8, he could as well lead the 5 as the 8, and my 6 would win.
If he hasn't stated a line, then I think that in a real tournament, I'd call the director and at a less serious event, I'd ask him to state his line and then decide as per above.
In the second scenario, I'd always tell him that he has the rest, show him my hand, and have a chuckle with him.
#7
Posted 2011-November-21, 11:10
#8
Posted 2011-November-21, 12:30
There are in between cases I suppose.
#9
Posted 2011-November-21, 12:47
Quote
For 1), the Law quote is "normal* line of play". If it's a borderline case, it's probably normal*. If it's a borderline borderline case, I'd probably accept the concession, and ensure somehow that they know to try to cancel the concession (once the onus is shifted as it is in L71). But I don't think that second half is legally necessary; it's just my personal ethics (I know the Law better than most players; I don't feel that that should gain me an advantage through their ignorance, as opposed to an advantage through my knowledge, which I think is perfectly appropriate).
Of course that would also depend on the event. The Flt. A Swiss, you're on your own lookout. The club game, with newer players? I'm probably short-circuiting this whole discussion: "you'd never get this wrong. Make 'em all."
#10
Posted 2011-November-21, 13:29
But if there is any way for declarer to lose a trick, I think it's fine to accept the concession. After all, it's a bridge error (not a mechanical error or other accident unrelated to bridge skill) to not know how many tricks you might take and how to take them.
#11
Posted 2011-November-21, 16:36
You may set the bar higher to satisfy your personal standards which I have seen done many times by players I like and respect.
I guess it should be done with the knowledge and consent of the Director in a pairs competition to avoid unintended consequences to others in the field.
What is baby oil made of?
#12
Posted 2011-November-21, 18:12
2- I would say it is wrong claim and we can not take any tricks, and concede.
"It's only when a mosquito lands on your testicles that you realize there is always a way to solve problems without using violence!"
"Well to be perfectly honest, in my humble opinion, of course without offending anyone who thinks differently from my point of view, but also by looking into this matter in a different perspective and without being condemning of one's view's and by trying to make it objectified, and by considering each and every one's valid opinion, I honestly believe that I completely forgot what I was going to say."
#13
Posted 2011-November-22, 02:28
BunnyGo, on 2011-November-21, 08:50, said:
1) Looking at my hand, I know there is no reasonable line where he can lose the trick, but it is technically possible for him to give it to us if he plays badly.
2) There is absolutely no order of cardplay where we can take any tricks. Even if he collides every honor and plays bottom up.
I was under the assumption that you cannot knowingly accept a trick that you cannot take. I see mycroft quoted the law. This is completely fair to me, definitely tell them in situation #2.
If they can lose a trick, it's fine to take it, they conceded it and it's possible for them to lose it. Totally agree with mikeh that if they have 875 of hearts and concede a heart when I have the 6 it is fine to take it, afterall had they played it out, and they thought the ace was out instead of the 6, they might well have played the 5 since it does not matter. I am not going to eliminate the possibility of that because they conceded, the error is theirs.
There was a similar situation that generated a long thread in the laws forum (I think they claim all the tricks, not aware that a trump is out), and I think many who have played against me wee surprised I would call the director and claim that I got a trump trick if that happened... but the principle is the same, they do not know the 6 is out because they think all of the trumps are gone, so they might have played the 5 had they played it out, and I should not be robbed of that opportunity becuase they miscounted and erroneously claimed. This is fundamentally different than when they know a trump is out and claim without saying anything, then you are just being an idiot who is trying to win on a technicality becuase they did not say anything when they claimed. Luckily these situations are obvious, for instance if a declarer has AKQJ9xx opp void in trumps, cashes the AK and everyone follows, and then claims without saying anything, obv he didn't think he had pulled all the trumps, since he was just testing if they were 5-1. However, if a declarer cashes the AKQ, someone shows out, then he cashes his remaining winners without pulling trumps, and then claims, I would say he clearly thought all the trumps were gone (else he would not have risked his remaining winners getting ruffed), and then he should lose a trump trick.
Sorry for the tangent but these situations are fundamentally the same to me, the opponent should not be allowed to profit from his error of miscounting something, so if declarer thinks something about the hand that he has a loser when he doesn't, he might well misplay, and not taking the trick would be allowing him to profit from the claim, but you are not allowed to take a trick that you cannot take, and then you are just stealing a trick by accepting the claim, it's not like he AUTOMATICALLY has to be punished for miscounting something...if he could play it out in any order and not lose a trick, then he got lucky, oh well!
I find the suggestion that one would accept a trick that they could not knowingly take when the opp concedes dispicable, equivalent to revoking on purpose and then not telling anyone and benefiting... sure no one knows that you did it on purpose, but you're still a scumbag.
#14
Posted 2011-November-22, 04:44
I then realised that with his mistaken count he could possibly lose a trick (I still had the second-highest trump), if it would be "normal" or not I was not sure. Declarer did not say anything, but since it was a relatively serious tournament I called a TD. It seemed like the TD didn't understand why he was called and believed we had questioned declarers claim for the rest without mentioning the last trump (unlike most of the TD's there he was not very good at English), and ruled that declarer would get the rest (which was an obvious ruling if declarer had claimed all the tricks). We accepted after what seemed like one failing attempt of explaining to the TD why he was called (it was only an overtrick at IMP's)...
The position was something like this (maybe this belongs in the ruling forum): Declarer had QT in trumps and believed I had a trump-trick with a now-singelton J behind him (partner did not follow to the last trick, a trump). Declarer had a sidesuit with the equivalent of Ax in hand to Kxx in dummy (which now broke 2-2) and an outside loser in dummy. Would it be "normal" to lose a trick here for a declarer thinking there are 2 trumps out?
#15
Posted 2011-November-22, 05:33
#16
Posted 2011-November-22, 07:30
As I have stated before, I strongly believe that there should a written rule which states: when a claim is made by declarer, the defense is automatically awarded a trick for every trump they hold (including trumps in separate hands), without regard to any other circumstance whatsoever. Perhaps excepting cases where loss of a trick is entirely impossible (i.e. declarer holds only top trumps in hand).
IMO this would save so much interpreting, lawyering, director calls, and forum threads, that it would be well worth the extra bit of time it takes declarer to remove any non-high trumps.
-gwnn
#17
Posted 2011-November-22, 07:56
billw55, on 2011-November-22, 07:30, said:
IMO this would save so much interpreting, lawyering, director calls, and forum threads, that it would be well worth the extra bit of time it takes declarer to remove any non-high trumps.
Or declarer could just say "drawing trumps" while he claims if there are trumps out. Why do you want a rule that protects people who forget that there is a trump out?
#18
Posted 2011-November-22, 08:05
JLOGIC, on 2011-November-22, 07:56, said:
er ... I was trying to penalize declarers who forget there is a trump out? Not sure how my rule would protect them.
As for "drawing trumps" as part of a claim, perhaps declarer can lay down enough trumps to do the job. This would also save the other op from tanking over his pitches. A verbal-only "drawing trumps" allows declarer who thinks there is one less trump out than there actually is, to make all the tricks when he might lose one in actual play. I know this doesn't happen at your level, but it does happen, otherwise we wouldn't have all these threads about it!
Perhaps we could allow "drawing 3 rounds of trumps", for example. Or even, "drawing all 4 remaining trumps". But IMO, not just "drawing trumps".
-gwnn
#19
Posted 2011-November-22, 08:39
RHO, after two minutes thinking: What are you going to do with your diamond loser?
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#20
Posted 2011-November-22, 08:48
billw55, on 2011-November-22, 08:05, said:
As for "drawing trumps" as part of a claim, perhaps declarer can lay down enough trumps to do the job. This would also save the other op from tanking over his pitches. A verbal-only "drawing trumps" allows declarer who thinks there is one less trump out than there actually is, to make all the tricks when he might lose one in actual play. I know this doesn't happen at your level, but it does happen, otherwise we wouldn't have all these threads about it!
Perhaps we could allow "drawing 3 rounds of trumps", for example. Or even, "drawing all 4 remaining trumps". But IMO, not just "drawing trumps".
Very sry almost 7 am I am not sure how but I read your comment as the opposite of what you said lol. I'll go to sleep.