Trinidad, on 2014-May-28, 02:05, said:
But, after the TD has explained North's obligations regarding the first UI, 5♣ is not an LA anymore (unless North holds 6 clubs, which is unlikely, and I assume that this is not the case). So, double/pass is not suggested over an LA, and, therefore, doubling/passing is not an irregularity.
nige1, on 2014-May-27, 16:08, said:
Suppose the director's explanation implies that double is the only permissible LA for North and 4♠X goes down. Suppose East has an easy double of 5♣ which would also go down. Rub of the green?
Trinidad, on 2014-May-28, 02:05, said:
Yes. (However, it is good to note that this scenario is much less likely than the 4♠X with an overtrick scenario, given that North, more or less automatically decided to save in 5♣. But it is possible and then it is the rub of the green.)
Coelacanth, on 2014-May-28, 06:46, said:
I was called to the table following South's attempt to prevent North from bidding. I first explained that there is a correct time and place for correcting partner's misexplanation of your call, and that South's comment earlier in the auction was not that time. I also admonished South that her attempt to prevent North from bidding was, while surely well-intentioned, most improper. I then carefully explained the ramifications of South's earlier UI to North, making clear that she had UI suggesting a 5C (or 5D) call and that if she made such a call and this damaged her opponents, the score would likely be adjusted. North then passed, ending the auction with East declarer in 4S. I instructed the players to play the hand out and to call me back if they thought they needed to. I was called back at the end of the play. The result of the hand was 4S -2 by East. East was insistent that, because of South's table action at the end of the auction, North should be required to bid 5C. (He had seen the West hand during the play, of course, but was probably not up to the full analysis to determine a likely result had North bid.) I instructed them to score up 4S -2 and took the board to review with my colleagues. Our consensus was that everyone shared blame here, even West who had said nothing during either of my visits to the table but who failed to call me at the time of the original UI.
If nobody called attention to South's original infraction, why was anybody abliged to call the director?
Coelacanth, on 2014-May-28, 06:46, said:
We thought that it was clear that NS's actions were much the more egregious. We thus ruled that there would be no adjustment due to the original UI (North had passed where 5C was suggested). We then dealt with South's reach across the table, which we considered a grave violation of L73. Since North, by her own admission, was attempting to bid 5C, we decided to impose that call on her for purposes of determining an adjusted score under L12. We felt that 5Cx -2 by North was both the most favorable result likely for EW and the most unfavorable at all probable for NS. We thus assigned this result for both sides.
So much for "rub of the green"
There seems to be broad agreement on the way to go about this ruling, so, again, I have to accept I may be wrong. But this shows why players find the laws unfair and incomprehensible. Unless warned that law 23 applies, North-South won't understand why the director wastes their time by making South choose a permissible LA, then insists the board be played out, and finally replaces the good result that NS achieve by pains-taking defence with the "most unfavorable of all probable results".
Although, as in several IBLF cases, this ruling flouts my reading of the law and my sense of justice, I'm still grateful for the education