blackshoe, on 2012-July-27, 08:11, said:
I haven't changed my opinion:
The revoke is of course an irregularity.
If a player withdraws a card he has played and replaces it with another card that is also an irregularity, technically independent of the preceding revoke.
As correct procedure (if nobody calls attention to the revoke) I would at least expect a player (not dummy) to ask him what he thinks he is doing (or words to that effect) to which the answer should probably be something like "Oh, I revoked".
That remark, and not the second irregularity as such is then what calls attention to the revoke.
If none of the active players (excluding dummy) calls attention to either of the two irregularities then I don't see how the second irregularity itself can be considered "calling attention to the first irregularity".
What is the consequence if the offender does not at all mention his revoke when asked about the second irregularity but just "invents" some other reason for it?
Now attention has been called to this second irregularity and Dummy (like any player) is then of course entitled to call the director but only on this irregularity, still not on the revoke. However, any director worth his salt will when called soon discover the revoke and take appropriate action.
This is all very technical, but I strongly believe that we must be careful here.