bluejak, on 2011-October-12, 09:00, said:
Questions should be phrased carefully so as not confuse the player answering. Answers should be careful, accurate and full, so as not to confuse the person asking. Sadly, this does not always happen [to be honest, I might have written "Sadly, this does not often happen"
].
Can a person ask for his partner’s sake because he thinks the answer was poor? No, it is illegal to ask a question for your partner's sake: it is a matter for the end of the auction.
My post might be controversial. Warning up front.
Asking for partner's benefit is not illegal. It is 'improper' (20G) which is not the same.
The 'proper' ways to handle this are as follows:
- A player should draw attention to an irregularity (9A1) when an explanation to his partner's question is not up to standard. He will call the TD and tell him that the explanation to his partner was confusing (which violates 20F and 40B6a). I expect that the TD would instruct the explainer to give an explanation that does not violate 20F or 40B6a. Needless to say that, in general, it will not make you very popular with players or TDs when you take this route where you could have just asked "Do you mean...?".
- Alternatively, the player could opt to not do anything yet. After the play, when all has gone wrong, he will call the TD and ask for redress because of a confusing explanation. The TD should assign an AS. In my opinion, a player should strive to obtain a result through play, rather than through an AS.
I find it completely proper to do something improper when it prevents a bad situation getting worse. But I guess that there may be people who will not shout "fire" since it is improper to shout.
For clarity's sake: This only applies when partner actually asked for the agreement and got a poor explanation. It doesn't apply when partner didn't ask (after all, that would be like shouting when there is no fire which is improper).
Rik
I want my opponents to leave my table with a smile on their face and without matchpoints on their score card - in that order.
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