nige1, on 2014-November-12, 11:34, said:
- If they're reasonably sure, some state their surmise as unqualified fact. They open themselves to misinformation rulings
- Unless they're pretty sure, most just claim "no agreement" and won't be budged. As far as current Bridge law is concerned, that's the safest position.
- A few like me, say they're unsure, but offer to speculate. And now we're in vampyr territory
pran, on 2014-November-12, 12:01, said:
1: The player being unable to give a complete and correct explanation because he has forgotten the agreement - he is (of course) at fault
2: There is indeed no partnership understanding (explicit or implicit) - the player making such a call is at fault!
A good player will never place his partner in a position where the partner cannot be expected to have any idea on what is going on. If he does he is the one causing his partner to misinform opponents.
In either case, opponents have been misinformed, and if they are consequently damaged then they should receive redress.
3: Partner does indeed have the idea which then, being an implicit partnership understanding, is what he is supposed to tell opponents.
If partner now gives the correct explanation then no damage is done.
However, if he turns out to give an incorrect explanation then we have an unfortunate example of alternative 2 above!
blackshoe, on 2014-November-12, 12:15, said:
nige1, on 2014-November-12, 12:18, said:
blackshoe, on 2014-November-12, 12:28, said: