. The face-down lead may be withdrawn only upon
instruction of the Director after an irregularity (see Law 47E2); the withdrawn card must be returned to the defender's
hand.
Sponsoring organisations may specify that opening leads be made face up.






it on the
table immediately before him.
The opening lead is first made face down (unless the sponsoring organisation directs
otherwise).




the defender to lead the suit of the penalty card, or to prohibit
him from
leading that suit for as long as he retains the lead (for two or more penalty cards, see Law 51);
if declarer exercises this option, the card is no longer a penalty card, and is picked up.
If the player is unable to lead as required, see Law 59.
the
defender's partner to lead any suit in which the defender has a penalty card (but B1(a)
preceding then applies).
the
defender's partner from leading one or more of such suits; but the defender then picks up every
penalty card in every suit prohibited by declarer and makes any legal play to the trick.
If the player is unable to lead as required, see Law 59.
to the irregular lead, but see Law 47E1. (If no acceptance
statement or play is made, the Director will require that the lead be made from the correct
hand.)
to the
irregular lead, the lead stands and Law 57 applies.
But see C below.










,
or if it was a defender's faced card.
Subject to Law 43B2(b) , when dummy has forfeited his rights. A claim of revoke does not
warrant inspection of quitted tricks except as permitted in Law 66C.






, leaving
among the played cards the one faced in playing to the defective trick (if the Director is
unable to determine which card was faced, the offender leaves the highest of the cards that he
could legally have played to the trick). A restored card is deemed to have belonged
continuously to the offender's hand, and a failure to have played it to an earlier trick may
constitute a revoke.
The Director should avoid, when possible, exposing a defender's played cards, but if an extra
card to be restored to a defender's hand has been exposed, it becomes a
penalty card (see Law 50).
. If it does refer to subsequent tricks:
If the statement or action pertains only to the winning or losing of an uncompleted trick
currently in progress, play proceeds regularly; cards exposed or revealed by a defender do not
become penalty cards, but Law 16, Unauthorised Information, may apply, and see Law 57A,
Premature Play.
play of the remaining cards. The board is rescored with such trick
awarded to the acquiescing side.
For the purposes of Laws 69, 70, and 71, ``normal'' includes play that would be careless or
inferior for the class of player involved, but not irrational.
play.
line of play that would be
less successful.
line of play; or unless failure to adopt this line of play would be irrational.
For the purposes of Laws 69, 70, and 71, ``normal'' includes play that would be careless or
inferior for the class of player involved, but not irrational.
play of the remaining cards.
Until the conceding side makes a call on a subsequent board, or until
the round ends, the Director shall cancel the concession of a trick
that could not have been lost by any normal
play of the remaining
cards.
For the purposes of Laws 69, 70, and 71, ``normal'' includes play
that would be careless or inferior for the class of player involved,
but not irrational.

