campboy, on 2011-June-14, 07:20, said:
It doesn't seem fair that the player making a jump bid can put his opponents under pressure by failing to observe the correct procedure. If you tell them that they might have gotten a ruling in their favour if they had bothered to use the stop card properly, perhaps they will do so in future.
No they won't, any more than they will start to alert penalty doubles if I have a go at them every time they don't. It's so deeply ingrained into the way they (and everyone around them) plays the game, they cannot change their behaviour.
Of course some of the fault is with the jump bidder, but when my RHO removes the stop card prematurely I don't feel under any pressure to act quickly, I just count slowly in my head for ten seconds or so and then call, just as if the stop card had remained out. That's just as deeply ingrained into the way I play the game, and I assume into the way everyone plays who takes the effort to observe the stop procedure.
I still think that if the alleged hesitator was in the habit of taking time after a jump bid, and had on this occasion taken just that amount of time, they would not have readily admitted to having broken normal tempo. I certainly wouldn't have done.