pran, on 2015-May-01, 04:02, said:
Law 53A clearly accepts a lead out of turn by just following suit and thus protects the inattentive player doing so by not making it an irregularity to not calling the Director and ask for a ruling in this situation.
NO. Law 53A goes much further than that. It gives the NOS
the option to act as if nothing happened. (He "
may treat the LOOT as a correct lead".)
pran, on 2015-May-01, 04:02, said:
But Law 53A also clearly allows this player to call the Director and then select the option to accept the lead out of turn.
Of course, the player can call the TD. I never said he couldn't. You claimed the only correct procedure would be to call the TD. That claim is incorrect. It is entirely correct procedure to treat the LOOT as a correct lead and play to the trick. (Law 53A)
pran, on 2015-May-01, 04:02, said:
And if he is in doubt whether or not to accept the lead out of turn and needs time to consider this then it is in his own interest with a singleton in the suit led to call the Director so that it will be clear that he hesitated for that reason and not illegally with a singleton.
Why? Is there any obligation for a player to tell his opponent what he was thinking about? The only requirement is that he had a
bridge reason.
And, for the record, it is
NOT illegal to hesitate with a singleton. (Or, if you think it is, please quote the relevant law.)
It is illegal to hesitate
when you don't have a bridge reason for your hesitation. That is a big difference.
Normally that makes it illegal to hesitate with a singleton because you don't have a bridge reason to think when there is only one action you could take (play your singleton).
But this isn't a normal case and the big difference becomes very relevant. In this case, though North has a singleton, there are several actions he can take. One of these actions (giving partner the opportunity to draw attention to the irregularity) can in itself be considered a hesitation.
So, North has a bridge reason to think whether he should:
- play the Q
- draw attention to the irregularity and call the TD
- wait a while to give partner the opportunity to draw attention to the irregularity (and when partner doesn't do anything choose 1. or 2.)
And since he has a bridge reason and bridge is a thinking game, North has simple not committed any irregularity. It would be horrible to adjust the score in favor of EW if neither North nor South has committed an irregularity.
Rik
I want my opponents to leave my table with a smile on their face and without matchpoints on their score card - in that order.
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the new discoveries, is not “Eureka!” (I found it!), but “That’s funny…” – Isaac Asimov
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