Correction of a revoke @/1 ACBL
#21
Posted 2023-February-08, 14:38
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
#22
Posted 2023-February-08, 15:13
Some posters mention a trump that was played in the third (?) trick, but that’s not mentioned in the OP.
What I read in the OP is:
- ♥ are trump
- (Implicit) N is declarer
- E leads ♣A, everyone follows
- (second trick) E leads ♣K
- S follows, W plays ♦7, N follows clubs
- (third trick) E plays ♣6
- W shows ♣9, making clear that he revoked in the previous trick.
I don’t think that W played the ♣9, merely showed it and maybe said something about a revoke.
It’s possible that point 6, E leading ♣6, came after 7, in which case ♣6 becomes a MPC, being a card exposed by a defender not during the normal course of play. There’s been an infraction, the revoke, and W has drawn attention to the infraction by showing nine of clubs. At that moment the play halts and the director should and in this case was called. The play doesn’t resume until he has made a decision.
Well, let’s hope Blackshoe gets a speedy answer.
#23
Posted 2023-February-08, 15:20
blackshoe, on 2023-February-08, 14:38, said:
Another lesson to be learned: when your partner doesn’t follow the suit led, ask whether he still has a card of that suit. Yes, you might have a mPC, but that’s much easier to deal with than this quite common mess.
Another lesson to be learned: if you revoke, don’t say a thing till the play is over. Make sure that all cards remain on the table without anyone messing with these, call the director and tell that you revoked. You’re not obliged to point out that you revoked, but it’s IMO the decent thing to do.
#24
Posted 2023-February-08, 16:07
sanst, on 2023-February-08, 15:13, said:
Some posters mention a trump that was played in the third (?) trick, but that’s not mentioned in the OP.
What I read in the OP is:
- ♥ are trump
- (Implicit) N is declarer
- E leads ♣A, everyone follows
- (second trick) E leads ♣K
- S follows, W plays ♦7, N follows clubs
- (third trick) E plays ♣6
- W shows ♣9, making clear that he revoked in the previous trick.
I don’t think that W played the ♣9, merely showed it and maybe said something about a revoke.
It’s possible that point 6, E leading ♣6, came after 7, in which case ♣6 becomes a MPC, being a card exposed by a defender not during the normal course of play. There’s been an infraction, the revoke, and W has drawn attention to the infraction by showing nine of clubs. At that moment the play halts and the director should and in this case was called. The play doesn’t resume until he has made a decision.
Well, let’s hope Blackshoe gets a speedy answer.
In the original post the H?6? was played by W. In the edited version the reference was omitted.
#25
Posted 2023-February-08, 16:47
blackshoe, on 2023-February-08, 01:48, said:
Sorry for lack of accuracy.
I was East and I just wonder what should have been done
Time frame after West picked up 9♣ turned it over as played, placed 7i♦n hand and played trump to trick and calling director I am not sure about.
Know director arrived after all on the above.
Believe director was called before West trumped trick3
I know all happened before director arrived.
Just trying to figure what should have been done.
Ruling was making 3 with 1 trick penalty equaled making 4 for +620 which gave us a bottom
I have no problem with that just wondering what should have happened
Thanks all for your input
#26
Posted 2023-February-08, 17:37
sanst, on 2023-February-08, 15:20, said:
Another lesson to be learned: if you revoke, don’t say a thing till the play is over. Make sure that all cards remain on the table without anyone messing with these, call the director and tell that you revoked. You’re not obliged to point out that you revoked, but it’s IMO the decent thing to do.
That's impeccable in terms of Law, but I don't much like it in terms of ethics except for never not calling the Director. I only ask partner if I strongly suspect he revoked, not merely to check (which can irritate opponents and provide UI). And I would always point out my revoke if it is not yet established: it is my right not to do so, and quite possibly advantageous to my side, but again not the decent thing to do.
I find it healthy to bear in mind that all such nonsense is only possible because we are not playing electronically.
#27
Posted 2023-February-08, 17:51
dickiegera, on 2023-February-08, 16:47, said:
I was East and I just wonder what should have been done
Time frame after West picked up 9♣ turned it over as played, placed 7i♦n hand and played trump to trick and calling director I am not sure about.
Know director arrived after all on the above.
Believe director was called before West trumped trick3
I know all happened before director arrived.
Thank you for coming back to clarify.
As I understand, nobody drew attention to the revoke by West on second trick and you, East, led ♣6 to the third trick.
Then at his turn West located ♦7 among his quitted tricks, substituted it with ♣9 which you saw, and played a trump.
Director was called by NS at some point after your lead and before any next lead.
Is this correct?
#28
Posted 2023-February-08, 18:28
pescetom, on 2023-February-08, 17:51, said:
As I understand, nobody drew attention to the revoke by West on second trick and you, East, led ♣6 to the third trick.
Then at his turn West located ♦7 among his quitted tricks, substituted it with ♣9 which you saw, and played a trump.
Director was called by NS at some point after your lead and before any next lead.
Is this correct?
Yes
#30
Posted 2023-February-08, 23:38
Was this the first three tricks, ♣A from East, ♣K from East, on which West revoked, ♣6 from East, at which point West pulled the ♦7 out of his quitted tricks, replacing it with the ♣9, and then trumped the ♣6 lead? If so, I think I'm giving West a procedural penalty of something like 3000% of a top.
I suspect Law 64C might come into play here, resulting in a score adjustment instead of the revoke penalty, but I can't tell that without seeing all four hands and the bidding.
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
#31
Posted 2023-February-09, 02:58
With the clarification I would decide that:
- ♦7 is played in trick 2 and goes back to the quitted cards,
- both ♣9 and the trump that W showed and played in trick 3 are MPC’s,
- in trick 3 W should the ♣9,
- N is told what his rights are in connection to the MPC, and E is told the part about AI/UI from the MPC,
- one trick is transferred to NS.
Afterwards the TD checks a possible disadvantage for NS and, at least I would, tells W never to make such a mess again on penalty of being flogged and, if not sufficiently demure, gives both a PP (error in procedure) and a DP (to maintain order and discipline)
Without more information about the hands and the play, it’s impossible to say for sure, but I think NS aren’t damaged. W didn’t trump the third club and one trick extra is transferred to NS.
#32
Posted 2023-February-09, 03:02
pescetom, on 2023-February-08, 17:37, said:
I find it healthy to bear in mind that all such nonsense is only possible because we are not playing electronically.
I don’t see what’s unethical about asking about a possible revoke, as long as you do it standard. I do, because my partner has problems to keep her cards firmly in her hand and is always fumbling when she has to play. That’s the price to pay for old age, I’m afraid. Anyway, it’s certainly better than let the revoke become established, even more so if you leave it to opponents to draw attention to it.
#33
Posted 2023-February-09, 10:56
It's just *incredibly* irritating, no matter which side of the table it's on. And the distraction it causes when my partner is one of those 100% costs me more tricks in a month than established revokes cost me in a year, so I request they not do it. And I live with the huge amount of UI transmitted when I do do a "you sure about that, pard?" and the answer is "why yes, I do have a lot of those. Thanks for letting your partner know." rather than "oh, that was a spade? Sorry..."
[*]Once again, a crutch that Certain Players used (to protect their clients, perhaps?) that "was so unfair" they couldn't use, even after their NPC/coach reminded them that "in this event, you can't do that" with big red letters in bold (they did, right? That's kind of one of the main jobs of an NPC - ensure the team knows the special rules?) got lobbied against, and magically the WBF decided it wasn't as big an issue as they thought. They may even be right.
#34
Posted 2023-February-09, 15:22
blackshoe, on 2023-February-08, 23:38, said:
Was this the first three tricks, ♣A from East, ♣K from East, on which West revoked, ♣6 from East, at which point West pulled the ♦7 out of his quitted tricks, replacing it with the ♣9, and then trumped the ♣6 lead? If so, I think I'm giving West a procedural penalty of something like 3000% of a top.
I suspect Law 64C might come into play here, resulting in a score adjustment instead of the revoke penalty, but I can't tell that without seeing all four hands and the bidding.
I don't have the biding .
They were bidding hearts and clubs [that is the reason I knew to lead A clubs ] We were bidding diamonds
Contract was 4 hearts These were the first 3 tricks. Only tricks we were intitled to were A&K clubs and a♦mond [opponets had sing diamonds
and a club ruff if taken early
Thanks again
#35
Posted 2023-February-09, 15:28
mycroft, on 2023-February-09, 10:56, said:
It's just *incredibly* irritating, no matter which side of the table it's on. And the distraction it causes when my partner is one of those 100% costs me more tricks in a month than established revokes cost me in a year, so I request they not do it. And I live with the huge amount of UI transmitted when I do do a "you sure about that, pard?" and the answer is "why yes, I do have a lot of those. Thanks for letting your partner know." rather than "oh, that was a spade? Sorry..."
My "surprised" was a diplomatic euphemism for "much more likely a revoke than a highly unlikely distribution or a counting error on my part".
But you may well be right, fortunately I have never had to face this as either a player or Director.
Nobody here would dream of asking partner (and only rarely opponent).
#36
Posted 2023-February-09, 15:31
sanst, on 2023-February-09, 03:02, said:
Just so long as she doesn't use a card holder and take shameless advantage to show shape
#37
Posted 2023-February-09, 16:19
dickiegera, on 2023-February-08, 18:32, said:
Dummy is not allowed to call Director.
But if I was in your shoes, after partner's antics I would be calling the Director myself, not looking for some technicality to avoid redress of score and any due punishment.
In any case Declarer too had witnessed West's antics (whatever West may or may not have said to explain them) and was bound to call Director.
sanst, on 2023-February-09, 02:58, said:
With the clarification I would decide that:
- ♦7 is played in trick 2 and goes back to the quitted cards,
- both ♣9 and the trump that W showed and played in trick 3 are MPC’s,
- in trick 3 W should the ♣9,
- N is told what his rights are in connection to the MPC, and E is told the part about AI/UI from the MPC,
- one trick is transferred to NS.
Afterwards the TD checks a possible disadvantage for NS and, at least I would, tells W never to make such a mess again on penalty of being flogged and, if not sufficiently demure, gives both a PP (error in procedure) and a DP (to maintain order and discipline)
Without more information about the hands and the play, it’s impossible to say for sure, but I think NS aren’t damaged. W didn’t trump the third club and one trick extra is transferred to NS.
I agree about actions versus West, but think you are magnanimous about tricks.
For now it looks like we transfer 1 trick for the revoke trick won and 1 trick for the successive diamonds trick won, then check that this was not insufficient compensation if NS so retain.
#38
Posted 2023-February-10, 02:13
pescetom, on 2023-February-09, 16:19, said:
For now it looks like we transfer 1 trick for the revoke trick won and 1 trick for the successive diamonds trick won, then check that this was not insufficient compensation if NS so retain.
E expected W to win the third clubs trick by trumping, but W has to play ♣9. That makes it more than likely that NS win this trick, which would without the revoke been lost to EW. Whatever happened afterward is impossible to know for us. That the TD should check that NS are compensated sufficiently, is obvious.
#39
Posted 2023-February-10, 02:59
sanst, on 2023-February-10, 02:13, said:
The clarification by author of OP says that EW have a diamonds trick, which must be successive to the revoke.
Assuming that NS were unable to pitch diamonds, of course, but TD will know what happened in any case.
#40
Posted 2023-February-10, 05:31
pescetom, on 2023-February-08, 17:37, said:
I find it healthy to bear in mind that all such nonsense is only possible because we are not playing electronically.
Coming back to this point: I still don't know what can possibly be not ethical about playing according to the Laws. As I wrote, I don"t think it's a decent thing to do to revoke and hope for the best, not calling the director afterwards, but it's legal according to the Laws and I wouldn't call it unethical. But one one hand English is not my native language, on the other ethical or unethical is subjective, it's 'in the eye of the beholder'.
May I recall the Commentary on the 2017 Laws of Duplicate Bridge, as published by the WBFLC. About Law 61B3 Ton Kooijman, chairman of that august body, wrote:
Quote
AFAIK the purpose of this law is to limit the problems arising from an established revoke. Revokes are often problematic for the less experienced director, which led to the introduction of the prescribed transfer of one or two tricks.
PS, some posts before this I wrote that the card mistakenly played when revoking, is a mPC, where it should have been MPC.