blackshoe, on 2018-May-27, 10:12, said:
No. Yes (when it is a psych of an artificial call and psyching that call is prohibited by regulation).
But I don't understand your point. You seem fixated on psychs, and all I have said is that deviations that are not psychs follow the same rules as deviations that are psychs, except that 40B2v applies only to psychs, and not to other deviations.
I have been under the impression that the distinction in the laws between deviations from agreements and psyches is there for a reason. Our discussion makes me wonder.
Say that a partnership agreement is to use transfer bids over partner's 1NT opening bid, e.g. that 2D in this position promises (at least) 5 hearts.
By definition in the laws transfer bids are artificial.
Say that a player "deviates" from this agreement by bidding 2D (surprising partner as well as opponents)
a: holding only 4 hearts (e.g. xxxx). This deviation is not "gross", is not a psyche, and can thus never be forbidden by regulation.
b: holding only 3 hearts (e.g. AKQ). This deviation is indeed "gross", is a psyche, and may thus be forbidden by regulation?
I am fixed on possible reasons for distinguishing between deviations in general and psyches in particular, and after our discussion fail to see any real reason (other than possibly historical from the childhood of bridge)? Do we really need such distinction?
(A teacher once instructed us when analyzing problem situations to create extreme, but possible examples and see what effect would be the result. I have many times found this advice very useful.)