On May 6, 6:33 am, Bob <
rfr...@rfrick.info> wrote:
> On May 5, 4:39 pm, Chris xxxxx <
mc11001...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
>
> > Once RHO leads the ace, I have a right to accept it as a played card.
> > I should not have to give up my right to play the hand in order to do
> > that.
>
> Under the current law, you have that right. If they take out that
> option, then you don't have the right. If they take it out, then
> sometime after 2017 you *might* get a hand where you want to accept
> the lead and still be declarer. You will regret not having that
> option, say to yourself "oh well", and choose among your remaining
> four options. No problem, no outrage, no sense of unfairness.
You asked what options in the law were needed to restore equity. Now
you are acting as though the law defines equity. If that's the case,
why ask the question?
Also, perhaps you need a good dictionary to explain to you the
difference between "law" and "equity".
> BTW, in your example, other things being equal, it is much better to
> put down your hand as dummy. When you ruff the ace of clubs OLOOT in
> hand and opponents can see your partner's hand because it is the
> dummy, they know the whole club suit. So they are one step closer to
> knowing the whole distribution of the hand, and they can accurately
> assess the club threat.
This reasoning (that seeing the hand without the void gives them more
information than seeing the hand with the void) is silly. Either way
they see 14 cards (one full hand plus the card the other hand
played). Either way they know how many clubs their partner has.
Seeing the hand without the club void gives them more information
about the placement of club honors and spots, which isn't very useful
if they are all being ruffed and declarer has plenty of trumps. On
the other hand, facing the hand with the club void gives away the
location of more specific cards in the other three suits, the ones
more likely to matter to the play.
Maybe you need to stop directing games long enough to actually play
bridge for a while, and then perhaps you would not make such silly
statements.
> Of course, that comment applies to your specific example. But so far
> it is the only example I know of where one can confidently assess that
> this option is the best.
I really hate it when people ask a question on an NG and then
summarize the discussion by omitting most of the information that
doesn't support their point-of-view. I gave an example of dummy's
entire distribution being known from the auction. So your comment
does NOT apply to that specific example.
If you want to post to a newsgroup to get people's opinions, that's
one thing. If you want to try to twist your summary of those
responses to suit your preconceived notions, that's another. If you
don't understand the effort that sometimes goes in to making a
particular hand the closed hand and a particular hand dummy, then,
again, I don't think you have the practical experience to have an
informed opinion on how the laws should handle opening leads out of
turn.
Considering how you've been challenging the contributors to this NG,
it's time for someone to ask you a challenging question: Of all these
opening leads out of turn that cause you so much trouble in the games
you direct, what proportion of them were made face-up?
Christopher Monsour