Revoke question EBU
#1
Posted 2016-January-25, 12:15
...............♠ -
...............♥ -
...............♦ A6
...............♣98
...♠ -...................♠ -
...♥ -...................♥-
...♦ 10................♦ Q52
...♣432...................♣ 7
...............♠ 109
...............♥ -
...............♦ J
...............♣10
South is declarer in a spade contract. He leads ♦A from dummy and discards ♣10. He then leads ♦6 and wins with the jack, as East didn't see any point in playing the queen.
(1) When the revoke is ruled on at the end of play, how many of the last four tricks should the defence be awarded?
(2) If we add an extra card to each hand as follows, with the same play (♦A discarding a club, diamond ducked by East), how many of the last five tricks now?
...............♠ -
...............♥ -
...............♦ A6
...............♣985
...♠ -...................♠ -
...♥ -...................♥-
...♦ 103................♦ Q52
...♣432...................♣ 76
...............♠ 109
...............♥ -
...............♦ J4
...............♣10
(3) Finally if the ♣10 and 2 were swapped between South and West in the last diagram, how many?
#2
Posted 2016-January-25, 12:36
In case (1) declarer makes the rest; equity, at the point ♦A is played, is no tricks to the defence; so the defence get one trick (from the penalty).
In case (2) declarer loses one trick (♦4); equity, at the point ♦A is played, is one trick to the defence; so the defence get two tricks (table result and the penalty)
In case (3) declarer loses one trick (♦4); equity, at the point ♦A is played, is two tricks to the defence (♦Q, ♣10); so the defence get two tricks (table result and the penalty; Law 64C would give them the same two tricks)
What am I missing? (I don't think East is entitled to ♦Q and the revoke penalty. Equally I don't think equity involves East ducking the second diamond when declarer hasn't revoked.)
"Robin Barker is a mathematician. ... All highly skilled in their respective fields and clearly accomplished bridge players."
#3
Posted 2016-January-25, 13:05
RMB1, on 2016-January-25, 12:36, said:
As I understand it from my correspondent, East was after "equity tricks" on top of "penalty tricks" (after the manner of defenders in these situations). There was also a question of whether East should have played the queen on the second round of diamonds anyway, on the grounds that it cannot cost (but I am not of this opinion).
One interesting point I thought of in the first scenario was whether South realised ♣10 was a winner. After all, he did try to throw it away. Might he still discard the club if East played ♦Q on the second round, choosing to lose a diamond trick now rather than a club trick later?
#4
Posted 2016-January-25, 13:08
So in cases (1) and (2) we transfer 1 trick to the defense. In case (1) this is more than equity, in case (2) it's just equity.
In case (3), equity is 2 tricks to the defense, which is more than the revoke penalty, so we assign that.
#5
Posted 2016-January-25, 13:11
VixTD, on 2016-January-25, 13:05, said:
When you're down to all winners, you have to pitch winners on other winners. So it's not clear that he thought he was pitching a loser.
#6
Posted 2016-January-26, 07:41
barmar, on 2016-January-25, 13:11, said:
The situation that occurred was described to me without the cards being given, so I made up a layout, and amended it when I was told it wasn't quite right. I didn't quite get the effect I wanted.
If South has missed the ♦J in his hand it seems sensible to throw the club, but I just wondered how the TD should go about deciding doubtful cases when trying to reconstruct what would have happened without the revoke. It doesn't make any difference to the outcome here, as the defence's expectation without the revoke is either no tricks if declarer realises the club is high, or one trick if he doesn't, so there's no further equity adjustment in either case after they get their penalty trick.
#7
Posted 2016-January-26, 16:52
VixTD, on 2016-January-25, 12:15, said:
When the revoke is ruled on at the end of play, how many of the last four tricks should the defence be awarded?
If we add an extra card to each hand as follows, with the same play (♦A discarding a club, diamond ducked by East), how many of the last five tricks now?
Finally if the ♣10 and 2 were swapped between South and West in the last diagram, how many?
IMO, the old 2-trick revoke rule was fairer and simpler; also easier to understand and apply. In common cases like this, the new rule is incomprehensible and controversial. It seems that it sometimes allows a player to revoke with impunity. If nobody notices, then he gains. If he's found out, then he forfeits just the one trick that he would have lost anyway.. Unfortunately, "Equity" law rewards infraction, in this kind of way. This can send the wrong message to players. It's no surprise that top professionals can rationalize their drift into cheating
#8
Posted 2016-January-26, 18:02
#9
Posted 2016-January-27, 02:17
Vampyr, on 2016-January-26, 18:02, said:
I doubt it would seem that way to someone who has revoked with the ace of trumps against a grand slam.
London UK
#10
Posted 2016-January-27, 05:22
gordontd, on 2016-January-27, 02:17, said:
Can there be such a thing as a deterrent which happens after the fact?
#11
Posted 2016-January-27, 05:45
Vampyr, on 2016-January-27, 05:22, said:
Wouldn't it deter you from doing it again? Or the knowledge that this would be the outcome deter you from doing it in the first place?
London UK
#12
Posted 2016-January-27, 06:12
gordontd, on 2016-January-27, 05:45, said:
OK, maybe there is some sort of deterrent effect on a vanishingly small percentage of people.
#13
Posted 2016-January-27, 06:42
Vampyr, on 2016-January-27, 06:12, said:
Clearly it's so small that a large number of players are going around deliberately revoking and getting away with it.
London UK
#14
Posted 2016-January-27, 07:30