gwnn, on 2012-July-08, 09:50, said:
I don't understand how this exactly happened. I want to bid 2H, OK I grab some more bidding cards than intended (happens all the time), then after I place it on the table don't I look at what I have put on the table? I guess it can happen that I grab a clearly thicker bunch of cards, place it, and because it's in the same denomination, I don't notice it until much later. I'm not saying that N is lying, just that she should check.
Surely what
you do is irrelevant. Players do normal actions at the table in all sorts of ways, and many, many players do not look at the call they have made once they have made it. While I always do, I had to train myself to do so when I got used to bidding boxes: it was certainly not instinctive.
awm, on 2012-July-08, 10:03, said:
So to clarify, even though the laws say "without pause for thought" there can actually be an arbitrarily long period of time between the bid and the correction, provided the person making the correction can claim she was not thinking about her call?
Two things: first of all, if a player has not realised they have made the wrong call, how on earth do you imagine they can be thinking about it? While the WBFLC have made this interpretation, it is a completely obvious one, and a routine interpretation in England long before the WBFLC spoke. No other interpretation makes any real sense.
Secondly, the buzz word 'claim': the Laws are what they are. Trying to suggest they are wrong because some person thinks lying and cheating is part of the game does not make the Laws wrong. Few people deliberately lie if asked the right question: those that do get a reputation and tend to not get very far with their cheating approach.
jallerton, on 2012-July-08, 11:18, said:
Interesting. I agree with gwnn that if the wrong bidding card comes out of the box, the bidder would normally be expected to notice whilst the bidding cards are in her hand or as soon as they are released on to the table.
As I said above, I do not think this is right. My experience is that while a majority look at their cards, it is by no means everyone. So when we are making a ruling of this sort it is hardly surprising if the player concerned did not look at their cards. I think the points made by Jeffrey and gwynn woud only have real relevance if
every player
always looked at their cards when they took them out of the box - and they don't
Consider a revoke. In general players don't revoke: they follow suit. A revoke is exceptional. But when there is a revoke an argument based on the argument that people don't revoke, they follow suit, seems pretty meaningless.
barmar, on 2012-July-09, 09:41, said:
Unfortunately, it's hard for the TD to rule that this is what happened, since he has little to go on but the player's claim that the card was pulled inadvertently.
TDs are not that bad!
There is a lot of evidence to be gleaned apart from the player's 'claim'. The TD should ask questions.
barmar, on 2012-July-09, 09:41, said:
We have guidelines that say that cards pulled from different sections of the bidding box are unlikely to be mechanical errors, but when the cards are adjacent in the box (either horizontally or vertically), we often have to take the player's word that it was a mispull rather than a brain fart. Unfortunately, I think there are lots of players who think "I saw the auction incorrectly" is justification for calling a bid "inadvertent".
We don't take the player's word when he makes his claim because he does not know the Laws, and his claim is self-serving, and thus accorded the normal amount of reduced weight. We ask questions and judge from the answers.
As to the poll, I have not voted. You had to be there to ask the questions. But a split ruling, as Ed explained, is illegal.