helene_t, on Oct 6 2006, 04:02 PM, said:
If the rules of the tournament disallow psyches, I'm not surprised about this ruling. After all, it seems likely that its purpose was, at least partially, to misdirect the lead.
As Echognome noted, the player says that this was not the intention, rather it was an attempt to find a seven-card fit. I don't consider this a psyche in any event and it is not even close when the player can explain his reasoning so clearly.
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But I think that directors who disallow psyches must state explicitly
- how is a "psyche" defined? I doubt that a simple formal definition (such as Roland's suggestion) would cover what is usually understood as a psyche. It requires judgement from the director to decide if a call deviated from anounced agreements, if it did so intentionaly, if the deviation was "gross", and if the purpose was to mislead opps.
I believe we should go with the definition in the Laws and use our judgement.
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- what is the penalty for psyching? Normally, we only adjust when there is damage. But if you use, say, a BSC in a non-BSC tourney, the penalty is ave- even if there is no damage. I have no idea what penalty to expect for psyching in a non-psyche tourney.
The EBU White Book (TD's guide) does not address this specifically even though it does prohibit psyching of strong 2
♣ openings at certain levels. Misbidding a strong 2
♣ bid (i.e., players believe it is a 2
♣ opener but it fails to meet the published criteria) attracts the automatic A- adjustment. I expect a psyche of such a bid attracts the same A- adjustment plus a procedural penalty.