Laws of Duplicate Bridge
The Laws of Duplicate Bridge is the official rule book of duplicate bridge promulgated by the World Bridge Federation. The first Laws of Duplicate Contract Bridge were published in 1928. They were revised in 1933, 1935, 1943, 1949, 1963, 1975, 1987, 1997, 2007 and 2017. The Laws are effective worldwide for all duplicate bridge tournaments sponsored by WBF, zonal, national and subordinate organizations.
History
The laws were greatly influenced by Harold S. Vanderbilt in 1925 when inter alia he introduced the current concept of scoring, the use of boards to hold the cards, and the Tournament Director. The main responsibilities of the tournament director are to adjudicate on disputes and irregularities that occur during the tournament and to control the movement.Through the 1930s, the Laws were promulgated by the Portland Club of London and the Whist Club of New York. From the 1940s onwards, their roles were supplemented by British Bridge League and European Bridge League on the European side, and American Contract Bridge League Laws Commission from the American side. From 1975 onwards, Laws were also promulgated by the World Bridge Federation Laws Commission, which claims the sole responsibility both for their content and their interpretation. In the latest edition, published in June 2017, the WBF acknowledged the historic cooperation of the Portland Club, the European Bridge League, and the American Contract Bridge League.
The American Contract Bridge League Laws Commission updated its own version of the Laws in September 2017. Note that, other than ACBL elections and using American spelling, the ACBL version incorporates all the changes approved by the WBF earlier that year.
Contents
There are 93 articles, covering all aspects of duplicate bridge.Due to growing popularity of online bridge, a version more suited for Electronic Bridge was issued by WBF in 2001.
Irregularities
Apart from definitions of basic rules and procedures, a large part of the Laws deals with handling of irregularities that may occur at the table. As such, the Laws are primarily used as a reference book for tournament directors rather than by ordinary players. After attention is drawn to an irregularity the tournament director should be summoned immediately by any player and the director may impose one or more of the following rectifications in order to restore equity to a side that has been damaged by the irregularity:- Transfer of trick to the opponents,
- Force the offender or his partner to pass for one round or to the end of the auction,
- Assign penalty card status to a card inappropriately displayed, i.e. a card that must be played at first legal opportunity,
- Impose lead restrictions if the offending side becomes the defense.
- Award an artificial score, i.e. assign so-called average-plus to the non-offending side, average for the partially responsible side, or average-minus to the responsible side
- Award an assigned score, i.e. assign the final contract and result of the deal to the one most likely to occur had the infraction not been committed, but which favors the non-offending side.
Handling of the most frequent irregularities is summarized below, without entering into fine details:
Revoke
A revoke, failure to follow suit when a player is able to, is handled by Laws 61-64. A revoke may be corrected without trick penalty before any player of the offending side plays to the next trick; otherwise, it becomes established. If a revoke is corrected, the exposed card becomes a penalty card and the opponents may change their played cards as they see fit.When a revoke is established, in general, if the revoking player won the trick, that trick, plus one of any of the tricks won by the offending side subsequent to the revoke, are transferred. Otherwise, if the offending side won the revoke trick or a subsequent trick, one of those tricks is transferred to the opponents. Additional tricks can be transferred if the revoke has caused more damage to the opponents than was redressed by those penalties. A revoke on trick 12 must be corrected, without rectification, if discovered before all four hands are returned to the board.
Call out of turn
When a player makes a call when it was not his turn to bid, the laws 30-32 specify various penalties depending on whose turn it was, and whether the call out of turn was a pass, bid, or a double/redouble. Briefly, after a call out of turn, the offender must make a call with the same or similar meaning, or their partner must pass for the remainder of the auction. The partner, rather than the offender, is prevented from bidding because it is the partner whose bid might be affected by unauthorised information.In addition, the offending side may be subject to restrictions in the opening lead. As a special case, no penalty is assessed when it was right-hand opponent's turn to bid and he elects to pass. Finally, an adjusted score can be awarded if the redress was not adequate to the inflicted damage.
Insufficient or inadmissible call
After a player makes an insufficient bid , the LHO first receives the option to accept it, in which case no penalty is assessed. An insufficient bid is deemed accepted if LHO has called. If rejected, the offender without penalty may replace the bid with a higher legal call that conveys the same information . If the election is not to do this, or if no suitable call exists, the offender's partner must pass to the end of the auction.An inadmissible double or redouble is canceled and must be substituted by a legal call. The offender's partner must pass to the end of auction.
Exposed card
When a card is exposed by one of defenders, by means of holding it in such a position that it can be plausibly seen by the offender's partner, in general, it becomes a penalty card. If exposed inadvertently, depending on its rank, it may be a minor or a major penalty card; however, any card may become a major penalty card if played out of turn. In any case, the penalty card must be played at first legal opportunity, which allows the declarer to organize his play to take advantage of the situation. However, the offender may play an honor of the same suit instead of the minor penalty card. There is no penalty whatsoever for the exposition of declarer's cards, provided it was played inadvertently.If a card is exposed during the auction, it may become a penalty card, and offender's partner may be forced to pass to the end of auction.
Play out of turn
In general, only the defenders are subject to penalties for opening lead or other play out of rotation. The offender's LHO may accept the lead. If not, the lead reverts to the correct player, and the card led out of turn becomes a major penalty card.An opening lead out of turn is perhaps the most frequent infraction. If the wrong defender makes the opening lead, the to-be-declarer has the following options:
- Accept the lead, spread his hand and become the dummy, and his partner declarer
- Accept the lead, spread partner's hand as dummy and play second from declarer's hand
- Refuse the lead. The illegally led card becomes a major penalty card
Unauthorized information
- Partner's remarks, questions, mannerisms, hesitation and similar,
- Information from calls and plays which were legally withdrawn and/or substituted as a consequence of that side's infraction,
- Overhearing remarks at other tables or seeing a wrong card.
The exception is when the player receives a UI inadvertently, as by overhearing remarks at other tables. In that case, the director may adjust positions, appoint substitutes, or award an adjusted score.
Mistaken bid or explanation
It may happen that when a player is asked to explain a partnership understanding, the explanation they give is either incorrect, or that their partner gains unauthorized information. Law 75 covers the proper procedure to address such a situation.History of the Laws of Contract Bridge
Scoring of tricks in no trump contracts
In the 1932 Laws of Contract Bridge, no trump tricks bid and made, and undoubled no trump tricks made but not bid, score 30, 40, 30, 40, 30, 40, 30.In 1935 this became 40, 30, 30, 30, 30, 30, 30.
Scoring of undertricks
before 1935 | 1935-1987 | after 1987 | |
not vulnerable, not doubled | 50 each | 50 each | 50 each |
not vulnerable, doubled | 100, 150, 200, 250, 300, 350 etc. | 100, 200, 200, 200, 200, 200 etc. | 100, 200, 200, 300, 300, 300 etc. |
vulnerable, not doubled | 100, 150, 200, 250, 300, 350 etc. | 100 each | 100 each |
vulnerable, doubled | 200, 300, 400, 500, 600, 700 etc. | 200, 300, 300, 300, 300, 300 etc. | 200, 300, 300, 300, 300, 300 etc. |
Redoubled undertricks have always scored twice as much as the same doubled undertricks.
The 1987 change, to the scoring of the fourth and subsequent non-vulnerable undertricks, was made after a hand in the finals of the 1981 Bermuda Bowl. Munir and Fazli, playing for Pakistan, bid skilfully to reach a vulnerable 7 hearts, which would have scored them 2310. But their non-vulnerable Meckstroth then sacrificed in 7 spades on a weak hand with fives spades to the jack. This went nine off doubled for a score of -1700, a profitable sacrifice. The change of scoring increased the penalty from -1700 to -2300.
Also, the "insult bonus" for making a redoubled contract used to be only 50. This was changed to 100, so that playing 5 of a minor, redoubled, making an overtrick, is always worth more than an undoubled small slam.
8-Level bids
It has always been the intention of every official set of Laws of Contract Bridge to forbid contracts for more than seven tricks. Some versions have stated this more clearly than others, but this intention of the Laws has never changed.International Match Points
When International Match Points were first introduced in Europe, they were as in this table.On September 1st 1962 they were changed to the table below.
they were changed again