bixby, on 2013-October-15, 07:41, said:
On the question of whether changing an IB necessarily draws attention to the irregularity:
I would agree with Pran that in theory a player could change an IB to another call in a way that would not constitute drawing attention to the irregularity, but would, rather, constitute a second irregularity. However, in practice, at least in my experience, a player who notices his own IB and attempts to change it without calling the Director almost invariably begins by gasping or saying "oh!" or making some gesture of surprise, which calls attention to the irregularity. So I think this discussion is about a very unlikely occurrence.
If, somehow, a player, in perfect silence and with no change of expression, made an IB and then replaced it with a different call, I would say that that does not by itself call attention to the IB, because, as Pran pointed out earlier, a player might do the same thing if his first call had been legal.
But as I say, that almost never happens. Players who notice their own insufficient bids generally can't help but show surprise in a way that calls attention to the irregularity. There is no requirement that the "calling attention" be done using words.
OP said:
[...]
When he saw the bid was inssuficent he paused for a couple of seconds to correct it with a pass.
[...]
Nothing in OP said that anybody drew attention to the IB, the offender simply changed his Call after a brief hesitation.
This discussion has from the beginning been whether the change
itself "drew attention" to the IB.
My opion has all the time been that the change was the irregularity of changing a call (to be ruled under Law 25), but that of course if somebody then drew attention to the preceding IB (or TD after being called himself noticed this) then it would be a Law 27 case instead of a Law 25 case.
But again of course, when as in your description the offender shows surprise over his IB then that will usually suffice as "drawing attention" to the irregularity.
This discussion is not really important during the auction, but it is very important during the play period when dummy is prohibited from drawing attention to any irregularity and thus may only call the director after some other player at the table has drawn such attention. {Law 43A1a}