ahydra, on 2012-November-16, 17:36, said:
1) Slow play - South at one table has a medical condition and so she plays a bit slowly. Combine this with another slow player and this table found themselves an entire board behind when the move was called (just before the move I saw they had a few cards left, but failed to spot they had an entire other board to play).
I went over to the table as they were halfway thorugh the auction and said "you're a board behind, please take an average" - only to be told (by the players) this wasn't allowed. I had no idea about this, but sure enough, EBU guidelines (e.g. White Book) state that a board "should not be removed" once it's been started. But I then had two other people tell me that rule is wrong, and two other others tell me that club rules can override this - in our particular case, the rules posted on the website do seem to allow for a board recently started to be cancelled, and so I can cancel the board despite the auction being in progress.
So, who is right?
You're the director, so you are (see Law 81C2).
In fact, the people who told you club rules can override the "board must be played out" rule are wrong. It is a matter of law, and clubs cannot override the law. So also are the people wrong who told you the rule is wrong. Nothing in the laws allows stopping a board in mid-stream just because the round is over at other tables. At the table where the board has been started, the round is not over yet (see Law 8).
I would gather there was no "don't start any new boards" warning, either from you directly or from a clock program, so unless they actually started the board (any one player physically removed his cards from the board, and was the first to do so)
after you called the round, they legally started "in time". So let them finish. I would give both sides a PP of 10% of a top, though, for slow play, because they have affected the ability of both pairs' opponents for the next round to have the allotted time to play the boards in that round. And I would assure them that if they don't catch up, more PPs will accrue. Or, you can take the usual club attitude, let them get away with it, and later, if not sooner, lose control of your game.
ahydra, on 2012-November-16, 17:36, said:
2) Claim - defending an (overly ambitious) NT contract, with two tricks left the defender on my left claimed putting down ♦Kx (he didn't say anything). I had ♦AJ and his partner had ♠J ♦Q. I called another director over (not wanting to make a judgement ruling at my own table) and he said that I win both the remaining tricks, even though LHO was aware that I'd bid diamonds and that I had either AJ or AQ left. I think this ruling is right - do you agree? (Of course, "a claim must be accompanied by..." is the golden rule!)
Where was the lead? With the claiming defender? If so, two tricks to declarer. Since he didn't say he knew the ace was still out, it is "normal" to think both his diamonds are good, so it is "normal" to lead the king. If, OTOH, you're sure he knew the ace was still out, the problem becomes more interesting. One might argue, as NigelK did, that it is irrational to lead the K if you know the A is out, and if that's so, he would lead low and as the cards lie get one trick (if declarer had the AQ it wouldn't matter which card the defender led, he'd get no tricks).
The laws don't say a claim "must" be accompanied by a claim statement, they say it "should" be. This makes a difference to how ready the TD should be to issue a PP (moreso in the "must" case). I would rarely give a PP for no claim statement as the laws stand. I would almost always give one if they said "must".
Quartic, on 2012-November-16, 17:59, said:
I agree - since the defender didn't state a line we play his cards in the least favourable way possible - playing the ♦K first.
The law does not say that.
ahydra, on 2012-November-16, 17:36, said:
3) MI - we had the auction, starting with partner, 1NT-(2H)-3S-(X). All bids were natural. The opps had an agreement that X was for penalty, but it was not alerted. Partner then went on to 4S. If there had been damage, would you adjust the score? I can't seem to find the rule that says something about redress not being given to a side that had the opportunity to ask about the opponent's calls without putting their own interests at risk, but I know it exists
![:)](http://www.bridgebase.com/forums/public/style_emoticons/default/smile.gif)
Does it apply here or should club players be expected to know the alerting rules for doubles?
The relevant EBU rules on alerting doubles are that any double of a natural suit bid below 3NT is not alertable if for take-out, alertable otherwise. My ruling would have been to adjust the score to 3SX making however many, but as it happens they doubled 4S and it made for a top.
Quartic, on 2012-November-16, 17:59, said:
I think this should have been adjusted to 3♠x making however many overtricks despite it being a top. If I remember correctly this is a higher score than 4♠x.
I don't think so. The method of scoring is presumably matchpoints, so IMO adjustments should be made to the appropriate matchpoint score. If both 3
♠X and 4
♠X give the same 100% of a top, then it doesn't matter to which one you adjust.
If, on the other hand, the term "score" in Law 12 refers to the aggregate score obtained before matchpointing, then yes, the score achieved (for 4
♠X) is "damage," because it's less than the score for 3
♠X+1, so adjust to 3
♠X+1.