campboy, on 2013-June-03, 12:48, said:
It doesn't just mean that the likely success has gone up; it means it has gone up relative to that of the other action. Admittedly my first post carelessly glossed over this distinction.
I still understood the point you were making. But I think that you are interpreting the Law without the word "demonstrably". A small increase in the chance of success of an LA relative to another LA does not make one LA demonstrably suggested if the other LA is still the normal call. I recall one of the two deposits which we retained when an opponent with AKJx x AQxx AKJx had a second bite of the (same) cherry after, at love all, 1H - (X) - 4H - (Pass)* - Pass - (X) (*BIT). This led to 4S+1 and the opponents asked for a ruling over the second double. One person polled by the TD passed (but he was frozen in a car's headlights at the time, and thought he might go minus if he bid). The other five had a second double, and the TD ruled no adjustment. The oppponents appealed. Double was considered so automatic that we kept the deposit.
You would, no doubt, adjust it back to 4H undoubled because the UI suggests passing (as partner was thinking of doing something) and the chance of success of double has gone up (relative to Pass) because of the UI. I think that there is a third criterion, and this is where the word "demonstrably" comes in. The UI must "demonstrably" suggest Double (in this case) for it to be disallowed. What that word means is anyone's guess. I would suggest that it means that double was likely to be more successful than Pass because of the UI but without it was not. On reflection, because we have to give the benefit of the doubt to the non-offenders, I would disallow a call which is suggested over another unless it was thought to be substantially better despite the UI. Blackshoe's "clear and undeniably" is a good guideline.
I prefer to give the lawmakers credit for stating things for a reason - barmar