Posted 2009-September-02, 08:29
Since we've reached the third page with barely any sensible discussion of the issue at hand, perhaps it's time to start a new thread with a boring title like "What should we do with L68B2".
It was a very clever and amusing idea to give us a bizarre and entirely legal happening, and let us try and work out what was happening, as an introduction to why you don't like this law. Although you quite plainly wrote just what you meant, by chance it was amenable to a different interpretation you never imagined, and no one worked out what you were talking about until you gave us a hint. I appreciate your annoyance. As someone who has to write reports as my day job, I know that such things happen, and are very annoying. But one gets used to it and moves on.
The law needs to answer the following question: Can a defender object to his partner's (defensive) claim, and if so what should happen when he does?
Bear in mind that a defender may have different reasons for objecting to his partner's claim, eg
(1) the claim is too generous to the opposition
(2) the claim is simply faulty
and the present law has only thought about reason (1).
I'm not sure I have a very good answer to that question, other than that the present answer the laws provide is a mess. I see Sven's comment that he reckons anyone's replacement might be worse. But if we actually try and answer the question I pose, and get away from the confusion that has reined as a result of the separate concepts of concession and claim, we might get a more sensible law.
This law would surely be better if in general there was no distinction between a concession and a claim. Under the present law, a concession is always a claim, but a claim is only a concession if it is for less than all the tricks. Let us talk instead about "tricks conceded in the course of a claim" instead of calling the whole thing a concession just when some tricks are conceded in a claim. A claim is a claim, even for 0 tricks.
Under the present law, a defender can only object to his partner's concession. Probably the architect of the law thought that a player wouldn't want/need to object his partner's claim of all the tricks, as that can't be improved upon. But actually it can, if it is a faulty claim. If partner makes a faulty defensive claim for all but one of the tricks, you can object to it and restart play, which may have a better result than having the faulty claim adjudicated. If you can do that for a claim of all but one of the tricks, why not for all of the tricks?
It's a mess. It's less of a mess than it used to be because they now state that exposed cards are not penalty card, so the famous Russian case* will not be repeated. But it's a bit of the law that is very rarely used. But sorting it out probably means ironing out wider issues in claiming.
So having warbled away a bit, perhaps I will make some suggestions.
(1) Reform the law so that there is no such thing as a concession, only a claim. Talk instead of tricks conceded in the course of a claim, when necessary to do so.
(2) We should stick rigorously to the concept that play always stops after a claim, even a defensive claim, even a defensive claim of zero tricks.
(3) When it is a defensive claim, allow the partner of the claimant to object and make a statement of objection, that will be taken into account in the adjudication, which may award the defending side more than were originally claimed, taking into account the likely play of the claimant's partner.
(4) This would be better still if the sensible idea of allowing weighted adjudication of claims was brought in.
(*In the Russian case something like this happened. A defender made a claim for fewer than all the tricks, and exposed his cards. Since they should make more, his partner objected. That resulted in play restarting with all the exposed cards penalty cards. As a result, declarer made all the rest of the tricks. We see from this that under the present law, a defender has to be very careful what he says when his partner makes a claim. Objecting could be a good idea, or a very bad idea.)