is this legal?
#1
Posted 2009-January-14, 05:30
It goes
pass pass to me and LHO opens 1♥ out of turn.
Do the laws allow me to open 1♥ then, as it is a psyche that is quite likely to work?
George Carlin
#2
Posted 2009-January-14, 05:59
Depending on where you play, your NBO may also have allowed you to agree methods with your partner following an opponent's irregularity. So in EBUland, you can have sepcifically agreed with your partner that if LHO opens out of term, you now play mini NT or super-random pre-empts (say) - although this is subject to all the usual rules on agreements, so you can't agree to psyche.
In the ACBL I believe you aren't allowed to have specific agreements.
#3
Posted 2009-January-14, 07:14
#4
Posted 2009-January-14, 08:12
Quote
adjusted score if he considers the offending side has gained an advantage
through the irregularity*.
* as, for example, by partner’s enforced pass.
#5
Posted 2009-January-14, 08:29
#6
Posted 2009-January-14, 09:08
Unless explicitly stated, none of my views here can be taken to represent SCBA or any other organizations.
#7
Posted 2009-January-14, 10:49
TylerE, on Jan 14 2009, 10:29 AM, said:
What if it was? All that does is complicate the TD's job - if the irregularity caused damage, there should be a score adjustment. That a psych might be judged "gambling" just means that if the psych itself contributed to the damage, the NOS don't get compensation for that part.
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
Our ultimate goal on defense is to know by trick two or three everyone's hand at the table. -- Mike777
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
#8
Posted 2009-January-14, 11:04
In the case discussed here, I think Csaba acts at his own risk when he decides to psyche a 1♥ opening.
#9
Posted 2009-January-14, 11:48
I have been in situations where the opponents have started playing the wrong boards, say, in a pairs event. What has happened is that they have started the bidding on a board and then somehow realized they were playing the wrong board. Maybe the TD came around and noticed or whatever. So the TD gives them the correct board and later on you face these same opponents on the boards that they had started out of order. The TD instructs you to bid as usual and if the bidding carries on as it did initially, then the board can be played as normal. Otherwise, the opponents will have UI and the board will be adjusted (I think to Avg+/Avg - ). So here is a situation where we can score an average plus just by psyching or bidding something unusual. Totally legal, but I think doing so would not be in the spirit of fair play. I'm not saying that if you have a hand on which you would normally psych you should alter your play, just that if you psych just to secure your average plus, you are within your rights, but I wouldn't think much of the action.
So while I think psyching the opponent's suit to really just mess them up because they had inadvertently bid out of turn may be legal, I wouldn't think it was the "right thing to do".
#10
Posted 2009-January-14, 12:21
brianshark, on Jan 14 2009, 08:14 AM, said:
So what?
The auction will be (assuming West is dealing and South is bidding out of turn):
West
Pass
Pass
At this point East can just bid naturally. What he has achieved is that North is barred from bidding for the rest of the auction.
So a double by the out of turn opener doesn't help his side at all.
Rik
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the new discoveries, is not “Eureka!” (I found it!), but “That’s funny…” – Isaac Asimov
The only reason God did not put "Thou shalt mind thine own business" in the Ten Commandments was that He thought that it was too obvious to need stating. - Kenberg
#11
Posted 2009-January-14, 12:46
I mean, if the auction were, say, P-P-1♣-1♥, is the auction still alive, in that perhaps Advancer can bid, because the 1♥ bid is sorta the same, kinda, with mere "no inference to be taken" rules? If so (I don't know), then a 1♥ opening seems like the only call available for force a one-sided auction. Maybe.
-P.J. Painter.
#12
Posted 2009-January-14, 13:11
helene_t, on Jan 14 2009, 12:04 PM, said:
But isn't this the same thing? Without partner's obligation to pass, it would be a takeout double, not a penalty double, so the penalty double only becomes available as a result of barring partner.
#13
Posted 2009-January-14, 13:16
So making a 'penalty' double of 1♥ seems perfectly fine to me, since he couldn't possibly have opened out of turn in anticipation of doubling a bid you hadn't yet made. However, if my side is having a longer auction and partner bids 4♠ on an auction where I'm expected to pass it, it would be illegal for LHO to bid out of turn and bar his partner if he did so intentionally to make sure his penalty double won't be pulled.
It should also be noted regarding the defense of the hand, the out of turn 1♥ opening is UI for RHO.
I think law 23 is being misinterpreted. I take 'gaining an advantage through the irregularity' as referring to something like 'forcing partner to pass so he will not pull your penalty double'. It doesn't bar you from simply getting lucky due to guessing what to do when partner is barred. If that was the intention then there wouldn't even be a point to finishing the hand after the bid out of turn.
#14
Posted 2009-January-14, 13:18
barmar, on Jan 14 2009, 02:11 PM, said:
helene_t, on Jan 14 2009, 12:04 PM, said:
But isn't this the same thing? Without partner's obligation to pass, it would be a takeout double, not a penalty double, so the penalty double only becomes available as a result of barring partner.
So by the rules LHO's double becomes a penalty double. But then by another rule you want to forbid him to use the penalty double?
Interesting.
#15
Posted 2009-January-14, 14:11
orlam, on Jan 14 2009, 02:18 PM, said:
barmar, on Jan 14 2009, 02:11 PM, said:
helene_t, on Jan 14 2009, 12:04 PM, said:
But isn't this the same thing? Without partner's obligation to pass, it would be a takeout double, not a penalty double, so the penalty double only becomes available as a result of barring partner.
So by the rules LHO's double becomes a penalty double. But then by another rule you want to forbid him to use the penalty double?
Interesting.
You're right, this is tricky. Because it would then mean that the NOS can psyche 1♥ easily, safe in the knowledge that they can't penalize you.
But I still don't see the difference between this and the situation Helene described.
#16
Posted 2009-January-14, 16:10
jdonn, on Jan 14 2009, 08:16 PM, said:
So making a 'penalty' double of 1♥ seems perfectly fine to me, since he couldn't possibly have opened out of turn in anticipation of doubling a bid you hadn't yet made. However, if my side is having a longer auction and partner bids 4♠ on an auction where I'm expected to pass it, it would be illegal for LHO to bid out of turn and bar his partner if he did so intentionally to make sure his penalty double won't be pulled.
It should also be noted regarding the defense of the hand, the out of turn 1♥ opening is UI for RHO.
I think law 23 is being misinterpreted. I take 'gaining an advantage through the irregularity' as referring to something like 'forcing partner to pass so he will not pull your penalty double'. It doesn't bar you from simply getting lucky due to guessing what to do when partner is barred. If that was the intention then there wouldn't even be a point to finishing the hand after the bid out of turn.
Josh is correct.
Law 23: Whenever, in the opinion of the Director, an offender could have been aware at the time of his irregularity that this could well damage the nonoffending side, he shall require the auction and play to continue (if not completed). When the play has been completed the Director awards an adjusted score if he considers the offending side has gained an advantage through the irregularity*.
* as, for example, by partner’s enforced pass.
The out of turn opener couldn't have been aware at the time of his irregularity that this could well damage the nonoffending side. On the contrary, it's heavily odds on that it would damage his own side to bar partner.
Anyway, after 1♥x get passed around to the "psycher", why should he sit?
Harald
#17
Posted 2009-January-25, 19:27
If he can psyche THAT, all else seems fair.
What is baby oil made of?
#18
Posted 2009-January-26, 15:11

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