pescetom, on 2019-August-17, 01:42, said:
Is it logical to do anything other than say "two of spades" or whatever when calling for a card from dummy? After all, that's what Law 46A defines as the correct procedure.
For that matter, is it logical for the laws to include Law 46B at all? Why not "if declarer does not comply with Law 46A, either defender may specify which card is to be played from dummy"? Why should the rules coddle declarers who cannot or will not follow them?
The argument goes, it seems, that if declarer intends "play" to mean "follow suit with the lowest card available", then the word "play" is perforce a word of like meaning to "low". I don't buy it. Neither does my dictionary. There is "declarer's different intention is incontrovertible", but what makes his intention incontrovertible? "Not able to be denied or disputed", the word means. You can't read his mind, so this provision isn't a "get out of jail free" card for him. Although in my experience directors will often rule as if it is.