Dummy's Rights
#1
Posted 2016-January-17, 19:44
This subject must have come up here before.
One dummy at our club is always telling declarer which hand is on
lead....you're in your hand partner".
If declarer does lead from the wrong hand the defense has the option
of accepting or rejecting the lead. If the dummy tells declarer
which hand is on lead isn't dummy participating in the play of
the hand?
Jerry D.
#2
Posted 2016-January-17, 20:51
#3
Posted 2016-January-17, 21:06
Yes, I've just read law 42b2 which states that dummy may "try to prevent
any irregularity by declarer". This seems to indicate that declarer must
be in the act of or about to make an irregularity. So forewarning declarer
seems to be against this law.
Jerry D.
#4
Posted 2016-January-18, 17:52
jerdonald, on 2016-January-17, 19:44, said:
jerdonald, on 2016-January-17, 21:06, said:
TFLB, L42b2 said:
#5
Posted 2016-January-18, 19:17
nige1, on 2016-January-18, 17:52, said:
I think most directors will disagree with you on this one, Nigel.
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
#6
Posted 2016-January-19, 04:17
The question is : when is the irregularity committed? If you look at the laws and the definition of when declarer has led (card face up close to the table or similar) then it is apparent that dummy can prevent declarer being in this position by forestalling him when dummy sees that declarer is about to commit the irregularity.
Get the facts. No matter what people say, get the facts from both sides BEFORE you make a ruling or leave the table.
Remember - just because a TD is called for one possible infraction, it does not mean that there are no others.
In a judgement case - always refer to other TDs and discuss the situation until they agree your decision is correct.
The hardest rulings are inevitably as a result of failure of being called at the correct time. ALWAYS penalize both sides if this happens.
#7
Posted 2016-January-19, 10:22
weejonnie, on 2016-January-19, 04:17, said:
That's not how it's generally interpreted.
When declarer has started to pull a card from his hand when he's actually in dummy, dummy can stop him. Or if he says something like "Play..." when he's in his hand, dummy can interrupt him before the card is named.
I don't think anyone has ever considered applying that law to irregularities like revokes, where it's not possible for dummy to tell that it's about to happen. On the other hand, dummy is explicitly allowed to try to prevent the revoke from being established, by asking "No hearts, partner?" when declarer discards.
#8
Posted 2016-January-19, 11:11
jerdonald, on 2016-January-17, 19:44, said:
blackshoe, on 2016-January-18, 19:17, said:
(FWIW, I would much prefer the law to forbid any player (dummy or defender) from communicating with his partner, except by calls and plays. For example no player should be allowed to ask his partner "Having none?").
#9
Posted 2016-January-20, 12:11
nige1, on 2016-January-19, 11:11, said:
The law says dummy may not participate in the play. So the question is whether these reminders are preventing irregularities, or participating in the play. I think the general concensus is that they're more like the latter. If we allow for preemptive reminders like this, dummy could presumably also say things like "play a spade" to prevent a revoke.
One could also stretch and consider these reminders to be "memory aids", which are not allowed.
#10
Posted 2016-January-20, 14:38
barmar, on 2016-January-20, 12:11, said:
One could also stretch and consider these reminders to be "memory aids", which are not allowed.
The way I was taught the laws 35 years ago and have always since understood them is that Dummy may try to prevent Declarer from committing an irregularity once Declarer (clearly) is about to commit that irregularity.
If Dummy for instance "warns" Declarer which hand has the lead before Declarer has started to lead from the wrong hand (like pulling a card from his own hand or stretching towards Dummy) then Dummy violates
Law 43A1c said:
And if Declarer has already (according to the laws) completed the lead from the incorrect hand before Dummy "warns" him that the lead is/was in the other hand then Dummy has violated
Law 43A1b said:
So the time window during which Dummy may attempt to prevent Declarer leading from the wrong hand is extremely narrow.
#11
Posted 2016-January-22, 09:55
pran, on 2016-January-20, 14:38, said:
If Dummy for instance "warns" Declarer which hand has the lead before Declarer has started to lead from the wrong hand (like pulling a card from his own hand or stretching towards Dummy) then Dummy violates
That's how most of us understand it as well, but there's nothing in the Laws that actually makes this distinction.
#12
Posted 2016-January-22, 10:46
pran, on 2016-January-20, 14:38, said:
If Dummy for instance "warns" Declarer which hand has the lead before Declarer has started to lead from the wrong hand (like pulling a card from his own hand or stretching towards Dummy) then Dummy violates
barmar, on 2016-January-22, 09:55, said:
Consider the consequences.
If Dummy is free to warn declarer against leading from the wrong hand at any time when Declarer or Dummy has the lead then Dummy is free to intervene in every such trick with a message to Declarer ("you have the lead" or "Dummy has the lead").
Under the same laws Dummy must obviously then also be free for instance to "warn" Declarer against committing a revoke ("remember that you must play a spade to this trick!").
What a can of worms doesn't this open for instance in the matter of cheating?
And if such activity from Dummy is not "participating in the play" I don't know what is.
#13
Posted 2016-January-22, 19:44
pran, on 2016-January-22, 10:46, said:
If Dummy is free to warn declarer against leading from the wrong hand at any time when Declarer or Dummy has the lead then Dummy is free to intervene in every such trick with a message to Declarer ("you have the lead" or "Dummy has the lead").
Under the same laws Dummy must obviously then also be free for instance to "warn" Declarer against committing a revoke ("remember that you must play a spade to this trick!").
What a can of worms doesn't this open for instance in the matter of cheating?
And if such activity from Dummy is not "participating in the play" I don't know what is.
Didn't I use the same example a few posts earlier?
I was just playing Devil's Advocate -- while this is how the law is generally interpreted, I think that interpretation is mostly coming from tradition, and some common sense, not the literal words of the law.
#14
Posted 2016-January-23, 07:19
pran, on 2016-January-22, 10:46, said:
For example, when defending, if partner always asks "Having none", when you show out, that might be OK. In practice however, a partner might refrain from asking, when he knows you aren't revoking (because he can see all the remaining unseen cards in the suit between dummy and his own hand). Thus, whether or not partner asks, there can be inferences about the distribution of the unseen cards in that suit.
IMO, it would be fairer (and simpler) if such rules (along with other unnecessary rules) were dropped and the remaining rules restricted partnership communication to calls and plays.
#15
Posted 2016-January-23, 12:57
nige1, on 2016-January-23, 07:19, said:
nige1, on 2016-January-23, 07:19, said:
nige1, on 2016-January-23, 07:19, said:
You have of course a point here, but the right to ask in order to prevent a possible revoke becoming established dates back to long before the birth of contract bridge. And the law change to prevent defenders asking such questions some (law) generations ago just had to be reversed. There seems little sense in trying this again.
#16
Posted 2016-January-23, 16:12
nige1, on 2016-January-23, 07:19, said:
The people I know who ask seem to be very consistent. They always ask the first time you show out of a suit, regardless of whether they can tell from other evidence that you should be out. Even if a suit was played 4 tricks in a row, with the suit clearly being 4333 around the table, they ask on the 4th round.
Sometimes they'll ask the 2nd time you show out, but this seems to be just forgetfulness.
#17
Posted 2016-January-23, 18:45
pran, on 2016-January-23, 12:57, said:
So No. Pran doesn't understand me correctly. I don't find it OK that you are allowed to ask partner "having none?" The law that permits this is unnecessary and unfair.
#18
Posted 2016-January-23, 18:56
barmar, on 2016-January-23, 16:12, said:
Are attitude signals more common than count in America?. Since the EBU allowed defenders to ask "Having none?", I've noticed that some EBU pairs have switched from count to attitude
#19
Posted 2016-January-25, 17:01
Yes, I am very aware of the "wow, declarer sure has a lot of those" variation of "having none?", along with the "hey partner, I have the rest" version of the no-ask. It's tough to rule, as we need to prove an inconsistency (same as the "well, the *last* 3 times I preempted, he had his call on the table before I had my hand pulled away" skip bid LHOs and the "How many <suit> does that show?" (fewer than you have, obviously) people, and...)
We have to educate, educate, educate. Educate the people unwittingly playing this system into asking more consistently; educate the opponents so that they call the TD and get their rulings; educate the TDs so that they can see the patterns; educate the teachers so that they introduce this kind of ethics (and this kind of thinking) to their students;... It can be done. Will it be done?
Oh, and personally, I'll reply to "having none?" but I would prefer partner not ask - I'll pay my 3 or 4 revokes a year, I'll make it up in a lack of screwups from the derail of my thoughts. Similarly, I won't ask, unless asked to, or unless the question is really "you psyched?" (partner overcalls hearts, shows out on the second round; that sort of thing).
#20
Posted 2016-January-25, 18:40