Pict, on Sep 30 2010, 12:10 PM, said:
campboy, on Sep 30 2010, 04:41 AM, said:
However, the presence of AI may mean that some actions are no longer logical alternatives and it may mean that the UI no longer demonstrably suggests anything (or changes which action is suggested).
I can see that if I have no choice about what to do, then I can't breach 73C.
But it can hardly be said that East has no choice in this case. What would you bid if partner had alerted, explained the 2C as inverted and then passed? Do you believe you have no choices to make? Perhaps you just meant to explain how AI could narrow choices, without relating it to this post.
By the way, 73C does not mention 'demonstrably suggested'. If we decide that 73C, despite what it says, is exactly equivalent in its effect to Law 16, then I don't mind, because then I have one process to understand: I might wonder why we have both Laws but that is another matter.
The bottom line for me is that I view the OP as describing a blatant violation of Law 73C. Of course I can be wrong (though not just because you don't like my attitude). Many posts relate to MI or to Law 16, or to inadequacies in the stated reason for appeal, or to what it means to say someone has an agreement. I just wonder why the TD and AC chose to ignore or discount Law 73 in their decisions. I can't see that they are allowed to do that, and I'd like to understand because currently I regard myself as bound by 73C.
Consider the three different scenarios:
1. Playing without screens, partner does not alert 2
♣ and then passes.
2. Playing without screens, partner does alert 2
♣ and then passes.
3. Playing with screens, partner passes 2
♣.
It is my contention that this East would almost certainly have bid 2
♥ in scenario 2 or scenario 3. It is matter of fact that this East did bid 2
♥ at the table (scernario 1).
Law 73C says:-
Law 73C said:
When a player has available to him unauthorized information from his partner, such as from a remark, question, explanation, gesture, mannerism, undue emphasis, inflection, haste or hesitation, an unexpected* alert or failure to alert, he must carefully avoid taking any advantage from that unauthorized information.
If it is judged that the player would have made the same call in both the other two of the three possible scenarios above then he has clearly not taken
any advantage from the UI.