hrothgar, on 2012-September-01, 19:10, said:
Who says it can not be psyched? The OP has not stated jurisdiction or anything else: there are many jurisdictions in which a conventional defense can be psyched.
32519, on 2012-September-01, 23:11, said:
What on earth has this got to do with an AC? Rulings are given by TDs. ACs are there for appeals against TD rulings.
When you play a method you have a duty under the Laws to let your opponents know what you are playing. This means not only should you avoid misleading them by lying and so forth [obviously] but also you should avoid misleading them by giving poor explanations. When you tell your opponents something shows a 2-suiter they do not expect a 7-4 hand. So, I would expect you to be ruled against. So why not just describe it accurately?
32519, on 2012-September-01, 23:11, said:
Same sort of thing: just describe what you are playing adequately. But 5-4s are considered 2-suiters rather more than 7-4s.
32519, on 2012-September-02, 00:17, said:
This paragraph suggests you have not gathered the point at all. Either what you are playing is legal, or it isn't, but misdescribing it will definitely get you ruled against. It is nothing to do with an AC: just check with a TD what is legal, and choose something legal, and play it and describe it properly.
helene_t, on 2012-September-03, 06:50, said:
I am not totally convinced that a 7-4 hand being described as a 2-suiter is ok. It seems completely unnecessary: he can just tell the opponents what he plays.