Vampyr, on 2015-April-13, 16:08, said:
Then it is truly a mystery why you invited speculation as to the intentions of the lawmakers with respect to bidding boxes when writing a law before bidding boxes were invented.
Because
you claim that 25A is meant exclusively for misspulls.
And I say that it would be very odd that the lawmakers would have written a law to deal exclusively with misspulls before the misspull was invented.
So, we can safely conclude that your claim is wrong and that law 25A is not exclusively for misspulls.
Law 25A is, in itself, clear what it is about: intended and unintended calls. It doesn't say anything about how or why the unintended call was made: misspull, coffee stain, misclick, slip of the tongue, distraction by the waiter or a leaking roof. None of these are excluded. There is only one requirement (other than the time limits: before partner has called and 'without pause for thought'). There needs to have been an intended call.
I will give an example to clarify. You hold:
♠AQ75
♥5
♦KJT73
♣Q86
Your partner opens 1
♠.
1)
You see you have a game forcing hand with four card trump support and a singleton heart. You decide to splinter with 4
♥. When you pull the bid out of the box, it turns out that the 4
♠ card is sticking to the 4
♥ card. This is currently the most common law 25A case: a misspull. You can correct to the 4
♥ bid that you intended.
2)
You see you have a game forcing hand with four card trump support and a singleton heart. You decide to splinter with 4
♥. You bid 4
♥ (by saying it, clicking it or by pulling a bidding card out of a box, it doesn't matter) when you realize that 4
♥ is natural. Tough luck. You intended to bid 4
♥ at the moment you bid 4
♥. Law 25A doesn't apply.
3)
You see you have a game forcing hand with four card trump support and a singleton heart. You realize in time that you play 4
♥ as natural, so you will have to decide on something else. You are thinking for a while between 2
♦ (Nat., GF) and 2NT (art. GF spade raise). You decide to bid 2NT because it will be better to show the spade support immediately. Somehow, the phrase "spade support" echoes in your mind and -horrors of horrors- you bid (through whatever means) 2
♠. You realize what has happened and you call the TD. You tell him truthfully that your intended call was 2NT but that the "spade support echo" made you say, pull, click, ... 2
♠. The TD will rule that Law 25A applies. The 2
♠ was not an intended call. "Spades" was just a phrase in your mind. The intended call was 2NT.
4)
You see you have a game forcing hand with four card trump support and a singleton heart. You realize in time that you play 4
♥ as natural, so you will have to decide something else. You decide that this hand is a game forcing spade raise and you bid 2
♠. Of course, that is pretty silly since, though 2
♠ is a spade rais, it obviously is not game forcing. You call the TD and say that you didn't intend to bid 2
♠. Instead, you intended to make a game forcing spade raise. The TD will say: "Tough luck. 'A game forcing spade raise' is not a call. So there was no intended call. That means that you cannot replace 2
♠ with an intended call, because you can't replace something by something that doesn't exist.". Law 25A does not apply. (Note that it will take the player 'pause for thought' to decide that 2NT is the bid to show a GF spade raise. The pause may only be a fraction of a second, but you cannot get from "GF spade raise" to "2NT" without thinking.)
I think that we agree on 1) and 2). I think that you consider 3) and 4) absurd. You think that those do not really happen. I will tell you that I have seen both type 3) and 4) several times at the table as a TD. And in order to determine whether Law 25A applies, you need to answer one question:
What was the intended call?
In case 1) it was 4
♥: Law 25A.
In case 2) it was 4
♥: no Law 25A.
In case 3) it was 2NT: Law 25A.
In case 4) there was no intended call (other than perhaps the 2
♠): no Law 25A.
Rik
I want my opponents to leave my table with a smile on their face and without matchpoints on their score card - in that order.
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