lamford, on 2014-April-03, 04:53, said:
While I agree that the play to this point might show that declarer was aware of the missing trump, that may not be available.
It may not be available to us, or to an AC. But it is available to the table director. The tricks are lying right there in front of him! And if an AC really cannot obtain the context of the previous play, I would rule this a TD's error and rule a split score in favor of both sides.
The only way I could not rule this a TD error is when the previous play was somehow "lost" before the TD arrived. (And I find it very hard to believe that no one would know whether there was a defensive cross-ruff when the hand is not even finished yet.) But in this unlikely case, I will rule that both sides are at fault and split the score so neither gets the trump trick.
lamford, on 2014-April-03, 04:53, said:
and going through the play will be too time-consuming.
What kind of an excuse is that for not doing your job? If one of your teenage kids would come home from school and said that s/he got a bad grade because studying was too time-consuming, would you accept that? Why would we accept that kind of an excuse from a TD (who is usually a little more mature/responsible than a teenage kid)?
lamford, on 2014-April-03, 04:53, said:
I think the times when the previous play does matter is when declarer has something like AKQxx opposite xxxx and draws one round of trumps and claims silently when everyone follows. He should say "drawing the remaining trumps" but some do not.
That is another example where the context of the previous tricks makes it obvious that declarer is aware of remaining trumps. I think that this is a case where the same may be the case. Therefore, I will not make a ruling until I get the context.
lamford, on 2014-April-03, 04:53, said:
However, it is extremely unlikely (although possible) that he has overlooked the two outstanding trumps, but this type of claim is allowed. Usually one rules declarer might have been unaware of a single missing trump but is unlikely to have been unaware of two missing trumps.
Though there may be a correlation, and even a causal relationship between the number of outstanding trumps and the likeliness that the claimer has forgotten them, fundamentally the number of outstanding trumps has nothing to do with it:
If we judge that it is likely that the claimer has forgotten then we rule that he has forgotten, whether there is 1 trump missing or 13.
If we judge that claimer knew about the outstanding trumps, then we rule accordingly, whether there is 1 trump missing or 13.
So, the TD shouldn't be counting the number of missing trumps. He should determine whether the claimer knew there was/were (a) trump(s) out.
Rik
I want my opponents to leave my table with a smile on their face and without matchpoints on their score card - in that order.
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the new discoveries, is not “Eureka!” (I found it!), but “That’s funny…” – Isaac Asimov
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