Play one, your choice Netherlands
#41
Posted 2011-September-23, 12:29
Merseyside England UK
EBL TD
Currently at home
Visiting IBLF from time to time
<webjak666@gmail.com>
#42
Posted 2011-September-23, 13:41
bluejak, on 2011-September-23, 12:29, said:
I have had both variants, from probably the same correspondent, but as I wrote here: With Clubs as the suit in question, not Spades nor Diamonds. Not that this really matters at all.
#43
Posted 2011-September-23, 14:50
To me the ruling is absolutely obvious: two tricks to the defense, retain deposit if appealed, and pp to declarer if he bugs me about it. I wouldn't even think a law citation is necessary.
But I guess TDs aren't allowed to do that kind of thing.
-gwnn
#44
Posted 2011-September-23, 14:54
billw55, on 2011-September-23, 14:50, said:
To me the ruling is absolutely obvious: two tricks to the defense, retain deposit if appealed, and pp to declarer if he bugs me about it. I wouldn't even think a law citation is necessary.
But I guess TDs aren't allowed to do that kind of thing.
Almost. I would allow the opponent to choose; and if he is dumb enough to choose wrong, give the declarer his trick
#45
Posted 2011-September-23, 15:12
iviehoff, on 2011-September-23, 07:37, said:
And even if one can deduce reasons for declarer's indecisiveness from his wording, it just doesn't seem relevant. It seems clear to me that the essence of 46B5 is that declarer is instructing someone else to choose, nothing else.
And I think you're playing unnecessary word games when the law is quite clear that it refers to intention. But when people start arguing over subtleties in the dictionary I tend to lose interest.
Basically, you are going to rule in a way that reduces declarer's chance from 50% to 0%, when declarer has actually demonstrated that he knows it's a 50% guess. Law 46B5 is for when declarer demonstrates that he believes that the choice of card is irrelevant. This is contrary to the intention stated in the introduction to the laws (and yes, I know the word "primarily" is in there and that the introduction has no force of law), and is simply not needed.
#46
Posted 2011-September-23, 15:31
gnasher said:
iviehoff, on 2011-September-23, 10:33, said:
OK, so if "play one, your choice" implies a deliberate choice, and "play anything" does not, their meanings are different.
Quote
I don't know when you think I implied that, but I certanly didn't intend to say that.
Quote
Er no, what I quoted tells us that a meaning of "choose" is "make a selection; exercise choice (between, from)".
Each numbered item in a dictionary entry constitutes a single meaning. Or it does in my dictionary, anyway.
#47
Posted 2011-September-23, 15:58
pran, on 2011-September-23, 13:41, said:
What about Barry Crane's rule (the queen is over the jack in minors, under it in majors)? Or is that only applicable to 2-way finesses?
#48
Posted 2011-September-23, 16:06
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#49
Posted 2011-September-23, 16:20
But I think the intent of 46B5 is pretty obvious: if declarer doesn't want to make a decision, the opponents are allowed to. Dummy is explicitly prohibited from making decisions for declarer.
Most of the time when declarer says "play anything", it really doesn't matter -- dummy is dead. Even though 46B5 says that an opponent should select the card, they don't bother because they can also see that it doesn't matter. But the purpose of that clause in 46B5 is to handle the case where declarer makes a mistake -- he thinks it doesn't matter, but it does. The opponents are permitted to take advantage of this and get the best result.
This also reinforces the law that dummy can't participate. Suppose dummy ALSO realizes that declarer made a mistake, and knows which card is best -- he's not allowed to exercise that judgement.
Now, the case in this thread is not quite like the usual "play anything" situation. It's not "it doesn't matter", it's "I have no way of knowing." But again, the obvious intent of 46B5 is that if declarer gives up his right to make the decision, it goes to the defenders.
#50
Posted 2011-September-23, 16:39
gnasher, on 2011-September-23, 09:54, said:
My point was that in general parlance it is demonstrably not abnormal to use "choice" in the sense of "free selection by any manner", so it is hardly incontrovertible that declarer meant something else.
#51
Posted 2011-September-23, 19:00
blackshoe, on 2011-September-23, 16:06, said:
About one in four or five posts has some value so let us let it roll.
Merseyside England UK
EBL TD
Currently at home
Visiting IBLF from time to time
<webjak666@gmail.com>
#52
Posted 2011-September-24, 01:48
blackshoe, on 2011-September-23, 16:06, said:
That partly results from the nature of the question and the way it was phrased. If you pose a question about the interpretation of a law, and that law demands interpretation of a player's language, it's hard to avoid a discussion of language.
#53
Posted 2011-September-24, 02:00
One can't be certain without hearing what the players have to say, but it seems very likely that what actually happened is that declarer made a jocular comment which, although phrased as an instruction to dummy, was not intended to be acted upon. Then an opponent (who may possibly play at Lamford's club) asked for a ruling under Law 46B. What should the director do?
It seems to me that to allow the defenders to choose dummy's cards in this situation would be iniquitous, would not be supported by the majority of players, and would tend to bring the laws into disrepute. Hence the director seek a way to avoid ruling in that way. If necessary, he can justify this by explaining that the rules have to be interpeted in a way that makes the game playable, and that his interpretation is generally accepted as the correct one.
The director has been given two ways to arrive at a ruling that gives a sensible outcome: accept that the declarer's different intention was incontrovertible; or accept that declarer's words mean what they appear to mean, and that this places them outside the scope of Law 46B5. I think he should use one of these, but I don't much care which one he chooses (or, indeed, whether he chooses not to choose, and instead tosses a coin).
#54
Posted 2011-September-24, 02:22
gnasher, on 2011-September-24, 02:00, said:
One can't be certain without hearing what the players have to say, but it seems very likely that what actually happened is that declarer made a jocular comment which, although phrased as an instruction to dummy, was not intended to be acted upon. Then an opponent (who may possibly play at Lamford's club) asked for a ruling under Law 46B. What should the director do?
It seems to me that to allow the defenders to choose dummy's cards in this situation would be iniquitous, would not be supported by the majority of players, and would tend to bring the laws into disrepute. Hence the director seek a way to avoid ruling in that way. If necessary, he can justify this by explaining that the rules have to be interpeted in a way that makes the game playable, and that his interpretation is generally accepted as the correct one.
The director has been given two ways to arrive at a ruling that gives a sensible outcome: accept that the declarer's different intention was incontrovertible; or accept that declarer's words mean what they appear to mean, and that this places them outside the scope of Law 46B5. I think he should use one of these, but I don't much care which one he chooses (or, indeed, whether he chooses not to choose, and instead tosses a coin).
If Director takes declarer's remark as a joke he will simply ask him to call a card in the proper manner.
Otherwise (as most here seem to agree) he will apply Law 46B5 and let either defender decide which card to be played from dummy (with no other restriction than that it must be a card in the suit led - even when dummy has KJx in the suit)
#55
Posted 2011-September-24, 22:25
Can anyone ever recall a declarer making a "play anything" designation in a situation where it actually made a difference what was played from dummy? The closest I've come is saying something like "Play anything except the heart ace".
#56
Posted 2011-September-25, 01:31
gnasher, on 2011-September-24, 02:00, said:
Except that this thread suggests it isn't.
London UK
#57
Posted 2011-September-25, 02:54
barmar, on 2011-September-24, 22:25, said:
Can anyone ever recall a declarer making a "play anything" designation in a situation where it actually made a difference what was played from dummy? The closest I've come is saying something like "Play anything except the heart ace".
You would (apparently) be surprised over what has indeed happened in real life.
#58
Posted 2011-September-25, 04:43
pran, on 2011-September-25, 02:54, said:
Can you provide a link to the details, or a description (perhaps in another thread, to keep the moderators at bay)?
#59
Posted 2011-September-25, 08:01
#60
Posted 2011-September-26, 04:18
barmar, on 2011-September-24, 22:25, said:
Oh, yes. I recall exercising my right to choose a card from dummy, where it mattered, a few times. There are two possible reasons for this. One, declarer has been mistaken in thinking it doesn't matter. On another occasion, declarer simply no longer cared: he was of the opinion he was already getting a bottom, and now didn't care very much how many extra he went down. In other words, these ended up being similar to mistaken concessions of a number of tricks.