Bidding Cards Removed
#1
Posted 2019-October-31, 07:19
"At the end of the auction the calls should remain in place until the opening lead has been faced and all explanations have been obtained, after which they should be returned to their boxes."
Was I right to deny rectification for the OLOOT, and was I right that the original declarer should remain?
Remarkably, two "simple rulings" in one evening at the North London Club, but neither was that simple to me!
#2
Posted 2019-October-31, 08:33
#3
Posted 2019-October-31, 09:00
If you want to enforce the bidding box regulation, give the player who removed his cards prematurely a PP. But it doesn't change the actual auction, so this should be treated as a normal OLOOT.
#4
Posted 2019-October-31, 09:11
barmar, on 2019-October-31, 09:00, said:
If you want to enforce the bidding box regulation, give the player who removed his cards prematurely a PP. But it doesn't change the actual auction, so this should be treated as a normal OLOOT.
I think one should rule that the player who picked up the bidding cards prematurely committed the first infraction, and he could have been aware that this would damage the non-offending side. The offender had won national titles and the leader had only been playing for about nine months.
#5
Posted 2019-October-31, 09:25
pescetom, on 2019-October-31, 08:33, said:
The person in question was not capable of anything beginning with "neural".
#6
Posted 2019-October-31, 09:35
If he sees an incomplete auction, he could have asked for a review. I understand that the regulation is intended to obviate this, but given that some of the cards were no longer on the table, he should be more careful.
Like I said before, give declarer a PP.
#8
Posted 2019-October-31, 09:47
barmar, on 2019-October-31, 09:37, said:
It is considered normal in England to leave bidding cards in place until the opening lead is faced and there are plenty who will tell him to put his bidding cards back as soon as he tries to scoop them up. So he might argue that nobody has led out of turn, but it would be difficult to argue that he has been doing this all the time for decades and never been picked up on this deviation from the procedures.
#9
Posted 2019-October-31, 09:50
barmar, on 2019-October-31, 09:37, said:
You are misunderstanding what “could have known” really means.
And I don’t think that there are many experienced players who habitually remove their bidding cards prematurely. It also seems that there was ample time for the declaring side to notice that the wrong player had led face down.
I am not sure whom I would require to make the opening lead, but I would not apply lead restrictions.
#10
Posted 2019-October-31, 10:20
Vampyr, on 2019-October-31, 09:50, said:
And I don’t think that there are many experienced players who habitually remove their bidding cards prematurely. It also seems that there was ample time for the declaring side to notice that the wrong player had led face down.
I am not sure whom I would require to make the opening lead, but I would not apply lead restrictions.
If Director thinks the removal of bidding cards was a callous ploy to confuse a beginner (and his presumably equally inexperienced partner) then impose a stiff PP by all means. I still fail to see how this infraction (merely technical or not) absolves the LOOT. The OP does not detail the time available to declaring side to notice that wrong player had led face down, but again if the declaring side is at fault they might deserve a penalty. I still don't see what law permits the Director to endorse a lead that is out of turn and has not been accepted. The question of who should then become dummy is mute, given that we are already well outside the laws.
#11
Posted 2019-October-31, 10:48
lamford, on 2019-October-31, 07:19, said:
I agree the ruling is not as simple or obvious as it seems. To me, however, the other one looks more complex.
lamford, on 2019-October-31, 07:19, said:
If the opening lead was made face down and faced only after the "OK", both defenders were at fault. Either one should have paid more attention to the auction and realised the error.
I'm with pescetom on this one: I fail to see how the early removal of bidding cards by one player absolves the LOOT.
#12
Posted 2019-October-31, 11:49
barmar, on 2019-October-31, 09:35, said:
If he sees an incomplete auction, he could have asked for a review. I understand that the regulation is intended to obviate this, but given that some of the cards were no longer on the table, he should be more careful.
Like I said before, give declarer a PP.
Giving declarer a PP would normally be harsher than allowing the lead to stand. Assuming the PP is 10%. The average gain from a lead out of turn in my database is 4.3%
#13
Posted 2019-October-31, 11:54
barmar, on 2019-October-31, 09:37, said:
At our club, SB would have called the TD every time you did this (after the first when he asked you to leave them there) and requested a PP, so assuming you play 24 boards a week for two decades, and declare one quarter of them, by now the TD would have given 6,000 PPs, or an average of 60/24% per week. That would be spotting the field 2.5% per week. And SB would have circulated all members asking them to call the TD whenever you did this.
Against any less observant person removing the bidding cards before the lead is obnoxious, against a near-beginner it is despicable.
#14
Posted 2019-October-31, 11:55
shyams, on 2019-October-31, 10:48, said:
Why should they make a mental note of the auction when they can see it before the opening lead if they wish?
#15
Posted 2019-October-31, 12:32
pescetom, on 2019-October-31, 10:20, said:
Rubbish. We are not outside the Laws at all:
90A The Director, in addition to implementing the rectifications in these Laws, may also assess procedural penalties for any offence that unduly delays or obstructs the game, inconveniences other contestants, violates correct procedure, or requires the award of an adjusted score.
Even if you argue that implementing the rectifications in these Laws does not include deciding that there is no rectification for the LOOT (and I would disagree) I can see nothing in the laws which prevents the loss of rectification being the penalty for the violation of correct procedure.
#16
Posted 2019-October-31, 12:50
#17
Posted 2019-October-31, 13:27
lamford, on 2019-October-31, 12:32, said:
90A The Director, in addition to implementing the rectifications in these Laws, may also assess procedural penalties for any offence that unduly delays or obstructs the game, inconveniences other contestants, violates correct procedure, or requires the award of an adjusted score.
Even if you argue that implementing the rectifications in these Laws does not include deciding that there is no rectification for the LOOT (and I would disagree) I can see nothing in the laws which prevents the loss of rectification being the penalty for the violation of correct procedure.
"Assess procedural penalties" seems to me both clear and limited, it cannot be intrepreted to include "deciding that there is no rectification for the LOOT" or any other arbitrary disregard of the laws.
Which if either of our positions is rubbish I leave others to judge.
#18
Posted 2019-October-31, 13:38
TylerE, on 2019-October-31, 12:50, said:
I agree it doesn't proscribe any penalties. Even in the USA.
#19
Posted 2019-October-31, 13:43
pescetom, on 2019-October-31, 13:27, said:
Which if either of our positions is rubbish I leave others to judge.
I think you need to read the definitions:
Penalty (See also ‘Rectification’) - penalties
are of two kinds:
<snip>
procedural penalties (additional to any rectification) assessed at the Director’s discretion, Nothing in the Laws prevents the TD assessing the penalty as the player being obliged to accept the LOOT because of his own irregularity. And Nothing says that they have to be 10% of a top which I assessed as too severe compared with the rectification being waived. Note "the Director's discretion".
#20
Posted 2019-October-31, 14:22
pescetom, on 2019-October-31, 10:20, said:
This is why the words “could have known” are used. The point is not to accuse anyone of anything.
lamford, on 2019-October-31, 13:38, said:
If no penalty is proscribed, then all are permitted.