Vampyr, on 2011-September-06, 11:48, said:
Robin, do you really feel that a "pause for thought" should (presumably in a new version of the Laws) be deemed to have elapsed even if a player does not notice that he has pulled the wrong card? Why? And if so, how long should this "pause" be permitted to last?
I think the laws (that is, the current interpretation) try too hard to allow recovery from mistakes, in a way that players find inconsistent, and TDs operate inconsistently.
I think that "pause for thought", or the lack of, should start when the call is made (is released on the table). This would be the same as for spoken bidding: the only chance to realise what you had said (and to change it) was as you had said it. It would be a mistake to make a call without looking at what call you had actually put on the table, and if you did not look at the time the call was made then the mistaken call would be irrevocable. I think such an approach would be much more satisfactory and more uniformly applied.
So here is a proposed rewording of Law 25.
Quote
A.
1. A player may change his intended call for an unintended call but only if he does so, or attempts to do so, without pause for thought from the point the call was made. The second (intended) call stands and is subject to the appropriate Law.
Except:
a. No change of call may be made when his partner has made a subsequent call.
b. If the auction ends before it reaches the player’s partner no change may occur after the end of the auction period (see Law 22).
2. If a change is allowed the LHO may withdraw any call he made over the first call. Information from the withdrawn call is authorized only to his side. There is no further rectification.
B.
A change of call not permitted by A is treated as a call out of rotation, see Laws 28-32.
The exceptions remain for definiteness: it is not expected that they could apply because there would invariably have been time for a "pause for thought" to have elapsed.
It would be necessary to delete "if the offender has not previously called" and the footnote, from Law 31B.