American Law book Europe!
#1
Posted 2013-January-30, 16:27
So today I made a fool of myself by quoting from Law 26A2 - and discovered serious differences in the first couple of lines!
So my question is simple: are there any other differences in the text?
Merseyside England UK
EBL TD
Currently at home
Visiting IBLF from time to time
<webjak666@gmail.com>
#2
Posted 2013-January-30, 19:56
There may be others.
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#4
Posted 2013-January-30, 20:04
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#5
Posted 2013-January-31, 03:31
#6
Posted 2013-January-31, 09:33
barmar, on 2013-January-31, 03:31, said:
Law 35. Letters in the ACBL version, numbers in the WBF version. Law 71 has numbers in both versions.
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#7
Posted 2013-January-31, 09:45
bluejak, on 2013-January-30, 16:27, said:
Yes - the preface in the American version deleted the bit in the Preface that starts: "Over the years there has been a marked increase in the expertise and experience of Directors..." Nice vote of confidence from the ACBL for their directors!
London UK
#8
Posted 2013-February-01, 09:38
WBF: if any suit specified in the withdrawn call was not specified by the same player in the legal auction ...
ACBL: if each such suit was not specified in the legal auction by the same player ...
Are these meant to have different meanings?
Both: ... require the offender's partner to lead such a suit
In the ACBL, does "such a suit" mean "any suit specified in the withdrawn call", or "any suit specified in the withdrawn call and not specified in the substituted call"?
#9
Posted 2013-February-01, 11:26
gnasher, on 2013-February-01, 09:38, said:
WBF: if any suit specified in the withdrawn call was not specified by the same player in the legal auction ...
ACBL: if each such suit was not specified in the legal auction by the same player ...
Are these meant to have different meanings?
Both: ... require the offender's partner to lead such a suit
In the ACBL, does "such a suit" mean "any suit specified in the withdrawn call", or "any suit specified in the withdrawn call and not specified in the substituted call"?
I have no idea on how ACBL intends Law 26, but the WBF intention and the laws are clear:
The lead restrictions in Law 26A apply to such suit(s) to which the withdrawn call relates, that was not specified in the legal auction by the same player.
Example: A withdrawn call related to both minor suits.
If both minor suits are specified by the same player in the legal auction then there is no lead restriction.
If one, but not the other minor suit is so specified then lead restrictions apply on the suit not so specified.
If neither minor suit is so specified then lead restrictions apply on both minor suits.
#10
Posted 2013-February-01, 12:17
I think the two wordings are intended to be equivalent. 26A1 and 26A2 are supposed to be mutually-exclusive cases that should encompass all possibilities.
#11
Posted 2013-February-13, 09:30
WBF: For an offending side the score assigned is the most unfavourable result that was at all probable.
ACBL: For an offending side the score assigned is the most unfavorable result that was at all probable had the irregularity not occurred.
This discrepancy is quite puzzling, because 12C1eii is in place to meet the desires of the ACBL, so one would think that the ACBL members of the drafting committees would have gotten this one right.
#12
Posted 2013-February-13, 11:17
The 2007 laws split these into separate subclauses. It seems like the WBF drafters made a mistake in not copying that qualifier into each of them, to reflect the original parallelism.
Since ACBL is one of the few places where 12C1e is used instead of 12C1c, it looks like they took care to make it say what was intended.
#13
Posted 2013-February-28, 15:37
barmar, on 2013-February-13, 11:17, said:
The 2007 laws split these into separate subclauses. It seems like the WBF drafters made a mistake in not copying that qualifier into each of them, to reflect the original parallelism.
Since ACBL is one of the few places where 12C1e is used instead of 12C1c, it looks like they took care to make it say what was intended.
Whilst I would have agreed with your interpretation of what the wording of the 1997 Law 12C2 appeared to say, the WBFLC had different ideas:
WBFLC Minutes Montreal 2002 said:
So I would suggest that when the 2007 Laws were written, this Law was rephrased to clarify what the WBFLC had intended all along.
#14
Posted 2013-February-28, 18:07
#15
Posted 2013-March-01, 05:40
#16
Posted 2013-March-01, 10:46
Quote
Quote
Quote
The odd thing about this is that, in 2002, we (well, many of us) in the ACBL started doing it in accordance with the Montreal minute, even though a lot of us thought Wildavsky's reading was correct --- and nobody told me in 2007 I was supposed to go back to doing it the way I was before 2002. In fact I just explained this rule to someone last weekend, on the drive back home from a tournament, including the significance of applying "had the irregularity not occurred" to only one partnership.
As far as I knew, the new wording to reflect the WBF interpretation was in everybody's 2007 book. I am surprised to find out otherwise. I don't recall the ACBL ever deliberately rejecting that interpretation.
#17
Posted 2013-March-01, 17:00
Zelandakh, on 2013-March-01, 05:40, said:
I sent mail to the webmaster complaining about the removal. I haven't received a reply yet. I encourage everyone else to write as well.
#18
Posted 2013-March-01, 22:55
barmar, on 2013-March-01, 17:00, said:
No need. You can get a Word version here.
#20
Posted 2013-March-02, 00:20