Grabbing the stop card then putting it back
#1
Posted 2013-September-04, 03:22
Prior to my 2S bid, I had the urge to bid 3S, and grabbed the stop card and put it down in preparation. Then quickly changed my mind and put it back and bid 2S.
Partner was solid for his 4S bid, and this was a normal contract in the room that made without incident.
Seems like I erred in my bidding mechanics, if that is the correct terminology, but was there any harm done?
#2
Posted 2013-September-04, 04:44
#3
Posted 2013-September-04, 10:50
If what your 3♠ would mean is "if I knew you had 5 spades I would have opened this a 15-17 NT", then Stop-2♠ needs to be treated as "I have three spades, and the same 11+-14 I claimed", and if partner now has a dodgy invitation, he can't make it. If partner has a heavy invitation (could treat it as GF, could treat it as INV) opposite a straight 2♠, and bids 4, and the defence would have been more successful opposite an obvious "both limited" auction, then you may be assigned the score for the invitational auction and the better defence.
#4
Posted 2013-September-05, 09:16
#5
Posted 2013-September-05, 09:49
#6
Posted 2013-September-05, 10:09
#7
Posted 2013-September-05, 10:12
barmar, on 2013-September-05, 09:16, said:
I think that it is safe to assume your first meaning, since it is so overwhelmingly likely.
#8
Posted 2013-September-05, 10:20
#9
Posted 2013-September-05, 10:53
aguahombre, on 2013-September-05, 10:09, said:
"Could demonstrably have been suggested" is what the law requires, not presumption. But I think we can demonstrate how the BIT could have suggested more strength.
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
#10
Posted 2013-September-05, 11:24
blackshoe, on 2013-September-05, 10:53, said:
I was beyond "could demonstrably have been suggested" and into presumed. Presumption is a subset at the far end of it.
At the table I would use the more discrete wording.
Edit: However, in my post, "presumed" seemed appropriate to get the point across that, even though we might think it possible the player simply used aggressive judgement in proceeding to game, we would "presume" UI could have had an influence rather than presume it didn't and further presume that the UI showed more strength, not inattention to the auction.
#11
Posted 2013-September-09, 04:01
jillybean, on 2013-September-05, 09:49, said:
It is an irregularity, just as detaching a card from your hand and putting it back, or failing to keep to an even tempo, or making extraneous remarks, is an irregularity. But if you believe that an infraction is an action that results in rectification, as I do, then it is not an infraction: these irregularities are things that you are allowed to do - but are discouraged from doing - and there is no direct rectification. But, as with all irregularities that fall short of being an infraction, (and some other things that aren't even irregularities), there can be a UI consequence.
#12
Posted 2013-September-09, 05:21
barmar, on 2013-September-05, 09:16, said:
Even if it could easily be either (which in this auction isn't so plausible, but could be) it doesn't follow that partner shouldn't be constrained. If the two alternatives both suggest the same action, then their disjunction also suggests that action.
An auction I've actually had was something like (1♣) dbl (1♠)
#13
Posted 2013-September-09, 09:42
campboy, on 2013-September-09, 05:21, said:
Your point may be true in some cases, but I don't think it's likely that the two causes for pulling and returning the Stop card are likely to suggest the same action in this case. I wasn't making a general statement about all cases where there may be multiple reasons for UI, just this particular situation.
#14
Posted 2013-September-09, 12:35
barmar, on 2013-September-09, 09:42, said:
I don't see why the same doesn't apply: whether the player was thinking about jumping to 3♠, or was willing to bid 2♠ believing it to be a jump, he is likely to have a better hand than he otherwise might. With a minimum neither real nor imaginary jumps would be in the frame.