lamford, on 2011-March-11, 06:39, said:
No, it seems that if not making 11 tricks is worse than a serious error then L12C1b applies. According to accepted practice.
lamford, on 2011-March-14, 07:54, said:
I agree that a serious error should be sufficient, and I would agree that, if I went off in 5S on this hand, I would think I had made a serious error. However the interpretation of serious error in the EBU is that it must be egregious, and even some of those are excused it seems; and the examples that are given of serious errors allow many exceptions. A stronger word than serious is needed to accord with common usage.
lamford, on 2011-March-14, 09:02, said:
I agree, so we need to decide what "serious" means in this context, and the WB expands on it. Cascade wrote: "if I went off in 5S on this hand, I would think I had made a serious error." Originally I concurred from a Law 12C1B point of view as well, but was persuaded by the other posters that "serious" is not interpreted in this way. I agree if I think a wording change is needed, then there is a forum section for that.
And where do I say that I disagree with the interpretations or examples of the EBL or EBU? In fact, the opposite - it was the examples in the WB that persuaded me that going off in 5S was not a "serious" error in this case.
I was merely following what you said, and assuming that is what you meant. Most of us seem to think that when Law 12C1B refers to a serious error it means a serious error: you have said "worse than serious error" and "A stronger word than serious is needed ...". So you do not, apparently, agree that serious error means serious error, based solely on what you wrote.