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Insufficient conventional bid ACBL

#1 User is offline   dickiegera 

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Posted 2010-January-10, 08:11

After agreeing to a Spade contract a 4NT is followed with a 4 Diamond response.
After a five second delay LHO calls for director and 4NT bidder remarks that the 4D bidder
merely pulled the wrong card and 4D bidder corrects to 5D before director arrives.

Since the Diamond bid is Insufficient & Conventional, what is the correct ruling?
Does 4D and 5D have the same meaning?
Thank you
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#2 User is offline   pran 

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Posted 2010-January-10, 09:37

dickiegera, on Jan 10 2010, 03:11 PM, said:

After agreeing to a Spade contract a 4NT is followed with a 4 Diamond response.
After a five second delay LHO calls for director and 4NT bidder remarks that the 4D bidder
merely pulled the wrong card and 4D bidder corrects to 5D before director arrives.

Since the Diamond bid is Insufficient & Conventional, what is the correct ruling?
Does 4D and 5D have the same meaning?
Thank you

No, but if the Director is convinced of a mispull he should rule Law 25A and allow the auction to continue without any other rectification that the replacement of (insufficient) 4D with 5D.

The 5 seconds delay does not constitute a pause for thought; such pause shall be measured from the moment the player becomes aware of his mistake.
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#3 User is offline   blackshoe 

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Posted 2010-January-10, 10:09

Asker's remark is out of line.
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#4 User is offline   pran 

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Posted 2010-January-10, 16:00

blackshoe, on Jan 10 2010, 05:09 PM, said:

Asker's remark is out of line.

Asker simply called attention to his partner's error, that is his privilege (Law 9).

The Director must rule whether the manner in which this attention was called, or other circumstances, prevents a law 25A rectification. We have no way of making that ruling here from the information submitted. However, I consider the probability of a true mispull to be rather high.

If he rules Law 25A then the call is changed to 5 and the auction continues without any further rectification.

If not then the offender is free to replace his insufficient 4 bid with any legal call at his choice, and regardless of which call he selects the asker must pass for the rest of the auction. (The information that asker in this case must pass is of course authorized to the offender)
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#5 User is offline   jeremy69 

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Posted 2010-January-10, 17:17

Quote

Asker simply called attention to his partner's error, that is his privilege (Law 9).


You must be reading a different problem to me. An opponent called for the director following the insufficient bid and the "asker" then offers his own reason as to why the insufficiency by his partner happened thus perhaps prompting the responder to claim he pulled the wrong card from the bidding box (which he may, of course, have done). I agree with Blackshoe that this is out of line.
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#6 User is offline   blackshoe 

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Posted 2010-January-10, 19:06

pran, on Jan 10 2010, 05:00 PM, said:

blackshoe, on Jan 10 2010, 05:09 PM, said:

Asker's remark is out of line.

Asker simply called attention to his partner's error, that is his privilege (Law 9).

No, he did not. He asserted a reason for the IB. He cannot know that reason is correct. Granted that an ethical player will not now assert that 4 is unintentional if that is in fact not the case, but that doesn't excuse his partner. Besides, as Jeremy says, an opponent had already called for the TD. It was IBer's LHO who called attention to the IB.
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#7 User is offline   Chris3875 

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Posted 2010-January-10, 23:01

Quote

If not then the offender is free to replace his insufficient 4♦ bid with any legal call at his choice, and regardless of which call he selects the asker must pass for the rest of the auction. (The information that asker in this case must pass is of course authorized to the offender)


Surely this is not correct - under the new Laws isn't the player free to change his insufficient 4 bid to 5 with no restriction on partner?
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#8 User is offline   Vampyr 

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Posted 2010-January-11, 00:04

Chris3875, on Jan 11 2010, 06:01 AM, said:

Quote

If not then the offender is free to replace his insufficient 4♦ bid with any legal call at his choice, and regardless of which call he selects the asker must pass for the rest of the auction. (The information that asker in this case must pass is of course authorized to the offender)


Surely this is not correct - under the new Laws isn't the player free to change his insufficient 4 bid to 5 with no restriction on partner?

It depends on what the 4 and 5 bids mean. Of course this is a nonsense, since partnerships do not have agreements about the meaning of a 4 bid over 4NT, nor about any other insufficient bids. But this is the new Law, and we have to live with it (not, I suspect, until 2017).
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#9 User is offline   pran 

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Posted 2010-January-11, 05:57

jeremy69, on Jan 11 2010, 12:17 AM, said:

Quote

Asker simply called attention to his partner's error, that is his privilege (Law 9).


You must be reading a different problem to me. An opponent called for the director following the insufficient bid and the "asker" then offers his own reason as to why the insufficiency by his partner happened thus perhaps prompting the responder to claim he pulled the wrong card from the bidding box (which he may, of course, have done). I agree with Blackshoe that this is out of line.

Sorry, Overlooked that. Mea culpa
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#10 User is offline   pran 

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Posted 2010-January-11, 06:08

Chris3875, on Jan 11 2010, 06:01 AM, said:

Quote

If not then the offender is free to replace his insufficient 4♦ bid with any legal call at his choice, and regardless of which call he selects the asker must pass for the rest of the auction. (The information that asker in this case must pass is of course authorized to the offender)


Surely this is not correct - under the new Laws isn't the player free to change his insufficient 4 bid to 5 with no restriction on partner?

4 can be corrected to 5 without any further rectifications on three different possibilities:

1: A Law 25A rectification
2: A Law 27B1{a} rectification
3: A Law 27B1{b} rectification

Alternative 2 is excluded because 5 in this situation will be an artificial call.
Alternative 3 is excluded because no interpretation of the 4 bid will make the 5 bid have the same meaning* as, or a more precise meaning* than the 4 bid.
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#11 User is offline   pran 

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Posted 2010-January-11, 06:18

Vampyr, on Jan 11 2010, 07:04 AM, said:

Chris3875, on Jan 11 2010, 06:01 AM, said:

Quote

If not then the offender is free to replace his insufficient 4♦ bid with any legal call at his choice, and regardless of which call he selects the asker must pass for the rest of the auction. (The information that asker in this case must pass is of course authorized to the offender)


Surely this is not correct - under the new Laws isn't the player free to change his insufficient 4 bid to 5 with no restriction on partner?

It depends on what the 4 and 5 bids mean. Of course this is a nonsense, since partnerships do not have agreements about the meaning of a 4 bid over 4NT, nor about any other insufficient bids. But this is the new Law, and we have to live with it (not, I suspect, until 2017).

One example to demonstrate the effect of the new law here:

1 - 1 - 1 - Director!

The insufficient 1 bid can now be replaced by a double that shows 4 Hearts, (or 5+ hearts but insufficient strength to bid 2).

The double in this position has a more precise meaning than the insufficient bid would have had (without the intervening 1 bid)
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#12 User is offline   helene_t 

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Posted 2010-January-11, 08:02

pran, on Jan 11 2010, 01:18 PM, said:

One example to demonstrate the effect of the new law here:

1 - 1 - 1 - Director!

The insufficient 1 bid can now be replaced by a double that shows 4 Hearts, (or 5+ hearts but insufficient strength to bid 2).

The double in this position has a more precise meaning than the insufficient bid would have had (without the intervening 1 bid)

Only if they play Walsh. Otherwise the insufficient bid gives opener the info that responder doesn't have longer diamonds than hearts.
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#13 User is offline   gordontd 

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Posted 2010-January-11, 08:38

pran, on Jan 11 2010, 01:08 PM, said:

Alternative 3 is excluded because no interpretation of the 4 bid will make the 5 bid have the same meaning* as, or a more precise meaning* than the 4 bid.

Sure it can:

"What did 4D mean?"
"I meant to show 1 or 4 keycards, but got confused about the level of my response".
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#14 User is offline   pran 

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Posted 2010-January-11, 08:50

helene_t, on Jan 11 2010, 03:02 PM, said:

pran, on Jan 11 2010, 01:18 PM, said:

One example to demonstrate the effect of the new law here:

1 - 1 - 1 - Director!

The insufficient 1 bid can now be replaced by a double that shows 4 Hearts, (or 5+ hearts but insufficient strength to bid 2).

The double in this position has a more precise meaning than the insufficient bid would have had (without the intervening 1 bid)

Only if they play Walsh. Otherwise the insufficient bid gives opener the info that responder doesn't have longer diamonds than hearts.

Your comment reveals another misunderstanding of Law 27B1{b}

"More precise" is easiest understood this way:

If you can find a hand on which the replacement call would be used but the insufficient bid would not (in its context) then the replacement call is less precise, not more precise than the insufficient bid.

You provide an example where the insufficient bid can be made with a hand on which the replacement call can not. This is quite OK because the replacement call is more precise.

Another example to demonstrate the opposite:

1NT - pass - 2 and 2NT - pass - 3 are both Stayman sequences.
Quite often (as in my own case) Stayman then indicates possible game interest, so 2 promises some 8+ HCP while 3 similarly promises some 4+ HCP.

In the sequence:
2NT - pass - 2 - Director!
The insufficient bid of 2 can then not be replaced with 3 because 3 although principally the same type of Stayman can be made with only 4 HCP which is too little for 2 as Stayman over 1NT.

Law 27B1{b} is rather tricky, but once you get the grasp of that law it is very logical.


OK I see your point slightly different, but then change the opening bid to 1 instead of 1 and the objection about Walsh (i don't know what that is) should go away?

This post has been edited by pran: 2010-January-11, 08:54

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#15 User is offline   blackshoe 

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Posted 2010-January-11, 08:54

gordontd, on Jan 11 2010, 09:38 AM, said:

pran, on Jan 11 2010, 01:08 PM, said:

Alternative 3 is excluded because no interpretation of the 4 bid will make the 5 bid have the same meaning* as, or a more precise meaning* than the 4 bid.

Sure it can:

"What did 4D mean?"
"I meant to show 1 or 4 keycards, but got confused about the level of my response".

If that qualifies as a reason for allowing a 27B1{b} correction, we have a bigger mess than I thought we did with this law. :blink:
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#16 User is offline   pran 

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Posted 2010-January-11, 08:56

blackshoe, on Jan 11 2010, 03:54 PM, said:

gordontd, on Jan 11 2010, 09:38 AM, said:

pran, on Jan 11 2010, 01:08 PM, said:

Alternative 3 is excluded because no interpretation of the 4 bid will make the 5 bid have the same meaning* as, or a more precise meaning* than the 4 bid.

Sure it can:

"What did 4D mean?"
"I meant to show 1 or 4 keycards, but got confused about the level of my response".

If that qualifies as a reason for allowing a 27B1{b} correction, we have a bigger mess than I thought we did with this law. :blink:

I don't understand how it can.

If that argument is relevant it must be a law 25A rectification?
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#17 User is offline   blackshoe 

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Posted 2010-January-11, 09:29

Gordon is saying, it seems to me, that "I just got confused about the level" is an argument that 4 meant the same thing as 5 would have, thus allowing a change under Law 27B1{b}.

It seems to me that a player who "got confused about the level" intended to bid 4, so no, not 25A.
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As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
Our ultimate goal on defense is to know by trick two or three everyone's hand at the table. -- Mike777
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
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#18 User is offline   iviehoff 

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Posted 2010-January-11, 10:08

pran, on Jan 11 2010, 01:08 PM, said:

3: A Law 27B1{b} rectification
Alternative 3 is excluded because no interpretation of the 4 bid will make the 5 bid have the same meaning* as, or a more precise meaning* than the 4 bid.

I thought the "purpose" of 27B1{b} (to the extent we can identify a purpose) was precisely to allow such (arguably, entirely innocuous) corrections such as this one. Someone intends to bid two steps up from 4N but does their sums wrong and comes out with 4D. Clearly 25A doesn't apply. But now he is forgiven by 27B1{b} instead.

Who can say what an insufficient bid "means" - you have to get inside the mind of the player to know. In the case of a 4D response to 4N, we can be pretty sure it usually means the same as 5D. And that is what brings this law into disrepute in wider cases, because we can't always be so sure.

Consider the case of a 2C response to 2N. If the player thought he was responding to 2N and merely miscalculated the level, he can correct it to 3C: in such a case 2C means precisely the same thing as 3C. But that isn't the only thinkg that could have happened. If he thought he was responding to 1N, or he was opening 2C, or something like that, then he probably can't correct it, unless by luck he can find a new bid that is more precise than the one he made. We can only tell the difference by asking him, and then we rely upon the truthfulness of his response. (Though an unlikely lie might be exposed later.)

Helene's example is an example of an even wider application of this new law.

This law seems to come from the same school of thought that devised the now repealed "purposeful correction", ie, trying to forgive people innocuous errors. The problem is that it is very difficult always to be sure what is an innocuous error.
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#19 User is offline   duschek 

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Posted 2010-January-11, 14:44

pran, on Jan 11 2010, 09:50 AM, said:

"More precise" is easiest understood this way:

If you can find a hand on which the replacement call would be used but the insufficient bid would not (in its context) then the replacement call is less precise, not more precise than the insufficient bid.

That was the original definition issued by the WBF-LC. However, there are examples which were probably intended as legal but which were illegal by this definition, such as 1-(1)-1... oops Double, and 2NT-2 Stayman.

In the meantime, the WBF-LC decided to loosen the requirements for applying Law 27B1b, which is reflected in the Beijing Meeting Minutes.

Quote

The Committee has noted an increasing inclination among a number of Regulating Authorities to allow artificial correction of some insufficient bids even in cases where the set of possible hands is not a strict subset of the set of hands consistent with the insufficient bid. The Committee favours this approach and recommends to Regulating Authorities that, insofar as they wish, mildly liberal interpretations of Law 27B be permitted with play then being allowed to continue. At the end of the hand Law 27D may then be applied if the Director judges that the outcome could well have been different without assistance gained through the insufficient bid (and in consequence the non‐offending side has been damaged).

Not really a concise definition, but that is what they have provided us with :ph34r:
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#20 User is offline   Chris3875 

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Posted 2010-January-11, 15:42

In the "Zone 7 Law Interpetation, Regulation and Guidance" document, effective 1st June 2008, if specifically sets out the example of 1S - 3S - 4NT - 4D and says "if the Director is satisfied that East was answering Blackwood but at the wrong level, then East will be allowed to correct to 5D without any restriction".

It was interesting to read the 2NT - 2C scenario as I probably would have just automatically allowed IB'er to correct to 3C (if the 2C bid was stayman) - I see now that that would not be the case.
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