Taking out partner's hand of the board to look at it after the hand is finished
#1
Posted 2012-May-01, 14:35
I'm not expressing myself very clearly today, so the sequence of events is:
-you finish a hand (generally as declarer) and it goes wrong, partner suspects you misbid/etc
-everyone puts their cards back in the board
-partner takes your cards out to look at them
George Carlin
#2
Posted 2012-May-01, 14:38
#3
Posted 2012-May-01, 14:39
-gwnn
#4
Posted 2012-May-01, 14:45
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#5
Posted 2012-May-01, 14:51
Phil, on 2012-May-01, 14:45, said:
Partner should ask to see your hand.
Handling partner's cards is an offence: Law 90B5.
"Robin Barker is a mathematician. ... All highly skilled in their respective fields and clearly accomplished bridge players."
#6
Posted 2012-May-01, 16:22
RMB1, on 2012-May-01, 14:51, said:
Handling partner's cards is an offence: Law 90B5.
It's an offense even if permission is given (by a player). Law 7B3.
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
#7
Posted 2012-May-01, 16:51
#8
Posted 2012-May-01, 18:15
gwnn, on 2012-May-01, 14:35, said:
I'm not expressing myself very clearly today, so the sequence of events is:
-you finish a hand (generally as declarer) and it goes wrong, partner suspects you misbid/etc
-everyone puts their cards back in the board
-partner takes your cards out to look at them
Generally I just ask my partner what is hand is if I am confused. If he cannot remember or won't tell me I head directly to the bar.
#9
Posted 2012-May-01, 18:25
blackshoe, on 2012-May-01, 16:22, said:
The perfect example of a law nobody knows about or cares about.
#10
Posted 2012-May-01, 21:47
#11
Posted 2012-May-01, 21:48
jillybean, on 2012-May-01, 16:51, said:
Also illegal.
Quote
Also,
Quote
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
#12
Posted 2012-May-22, 22:38
General rule, DON'T do it.
#13
Posted 2012-May-23, 01:44
But I would not take his cards out of the box later. He can tell me what he had if I am interessted, can't he?
I would not care if he takes my cards out of the box after the board. He is my partner, if such a small offense (if it is one) insults me, I should ask myself how sensitive I am.
Roland
Sanity Check: Failure (Fluffy)
More system is not the answer...
#14
Posted 2012-May-23, 02:04
Codo, on 2012-May-23, 01:44, said:
The simple act of him looking at my hand usually doesn't bother me, but it's often other mannerisms (shakes his head in disbelief, shows it to RHO to complain, growls discreetly) that come with it. There are two ways to do it: one where you are just curious and one where you are acting like a teacher checking a student's homework.
George Carlin
#15
Posted 2012-May-23, 02:14
However, I have to live with several head shakes in disbelief, normaly my partners do not even need to look at my hand to do so- the scoresheet is sufficent.
Roland
Sanity Check: Failure (Fluffy)
More system is not the answer...
#16
Posted 2012-May-23, 09:37
inquiry, on 2012-May-22, 22:38, said:
Who's insulting them? They're the one asking to look, are they insulting themselves by revealing that they don't remember?
Last night in a club Swiss, after IMPing a round I had a disagreement with a teammate about whether they held a singleton or Ax in my trump suit. I finally pulled out his hand to show him that I was right. It turned out that he was talking about a different board.
#17
Posted 2012-May-23, 13:15
Anybody who grabs my hand without asking gets a lecture; anyone who does it after the lecture never plays with me again. An opponents who tries it gets a TD call first time (because lecturing opponents is bad). If anyone complains about me secretary-birding again, I point out the times I've had to deal with a 14-12 that was caused by an opponent pulling the cards out after the round, dropping one, putting the hand back, and then putting the odd card in the "obvious" hand (his), or the ones where N and W (or N and S) get switched halfway through the round "and you don't want a full board fouling penalty, do you? I know I don't.")
Anyone who doesn't accept "no" as an answer to the request - unless it's a "I think you revoked/I need to see the claim again/[other legal]" issue - fits in the same categories as above. Having said that, I don't remember the last time I've said no.
#18
Posted 2012-May-28, 06:56
inquiry, on 2012-May-22, 22:38, said:
General rule, DON'T do it.
I only sometimes ask partner after a claim if the hands aren't fully shown.
#19
Posted 2012-June-01, 09:05
When I'm dummy I switch off a bit so don't keep track of everything (seems reasonable enough, right?). And often the hand is interesting and I want to see if I had spotted the winning defence, or why partner bid/played as he did, or what the opponents could make etc. I also like to have some idea of who can make what so I can gauge our running score. Partner often wonders the same things and I'm always happy for him to grab my curtain card.
With opps I prefer if they ask me first out of courtesy (and I always ask them). I wouldn't dream of calling the TD over this.
ahydra