aguahombre, on 2015-February-04, 17:59, said:
More important, IMO, in opposition to your idea that the PARTNER of the IB'r should be the one called away from the table --- is this:
Only the guy who did it truly knows what he thought when it happened. We should not be encouraging his partner to speculate on something which might have the same or more precise meaning than the IB when we really don't want him considering it at all.
lamford, on 2015-February-04, 19:25, said:
I fail to see how it makes any difference. The player is just as likely to speculate on what his partner originally thought while the offender is away from the table.
Yes. The question is really whether the opponents should be forced to speculate, when they will have a lot less knowledge about the players, the system etc.
blackshoe, on 2015-February-05, 08:14, said:
Players have an obligation to complete a system card IAW RA regulations. Their opponents have a right to see those cards before beginning play with them. They do not have a right to ask questions during the auction or play periods about possible future calls.
You have never seen a pair whose convention cards are inadequately completed? And during the auction, should a pair with more thorough convention cards be penalised?
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Players are not "obligated to explain the [intended] meaning" of an IB, whether the IB becomes part of the legal auction or not. They are obligated to explain the agreed meaning. There can be no agreement about the meaning of an IB. So there's nothing to explain except the agreed meaning of the bid, even if it doesn't match the hand or the bidder's intent.
This is rather disingenuous. The application of this law depends on the meaning that was in the IBer's head. Whatever it was, it will have been a systemic bid. So the opponents (if they have accepted the bid) are entitled to know the agreement upon which the call was based in the fictitious auction that the IBer imagined.
I know not with what weapons World War III will be fought, but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones -- Albert Einstein