East-West were unhappy with my ruling at the end of the Specsavers Sunday Duplicate at the Stanmore Seniors Club yesterday. After a simple Blackwood enquiry North bid 7NT and East led the queen of hearts. Declarer claimed 13 tricks almost immediately and the opponents concurred. At the end of the evening they asked one or two friends if the grand had been bid against them, and were told it could not make. They asked for a ruling and I decided
a) there was no specific trick the defenders would "likely" have won. They might have won an early diamond or a club if the declarer miscounted or they might have won trick 13. Note that the law does not say "the total probability of all tricks must be above 50%".
b) although no single or double squeeze actually works, because the menaces are not correctly positioned, I could not in my heart of hearts decide that East-West would "likely" have won trick 13 had play continued, assuming declarer got that far. If they could not count to 13 when a claim was made, what chance did they have of defending the ending?
Do you agree with my ruling? There was a slight suspicion that North was a likely lad, trying it on, but I expect he just did not consider the minors both breaking 5-0.
A director may judge this to be "Normal" play by any competent declarer
Remember Burn's great "double squeeze" poem
Pretty problem, Paul!
This is a standard faulty "claim". It does not specify that any particular cards take tricks, or in what order to play those cards.. Hence, it is impossible for defenders, belatedly, to dispute any particular trick. Perhaps, the law does cover such a typical case, implicitly? Or perhaps, again, we must replace the law with common sense? Either way, I think Paul's ruling (13 tricks) is correct.
It seems that current Bridge Law is