VixTD, on 2015-October-01, 07:45, said:
South is a considerably weaker player than East or West.
I presume, therefore, that declarer covered in dummy and ducked when North played the king and emerged with an unexpected overtrick when North continued spades and South did not have the ten?
Given that all leads are nine tricks, it is not clear what point, if any, East-West are trying to make.
And, nothing is
demonstrably suggested by the BIT. North could feasibly have been considering double, 2D, 2H or 2S, depending on whether he had clubs, diamonds, hearts or spades ... So South can lead anything he likes.
I would not record it. There is nothing to record.
I prefer to give the lawmakers credit for stating things for a reason - barmar
VixTD writes "At the same club pairs as the insufficient jump: North thought for a long time before passing over 2♣. South now found the imaginative lead of ♠J. EW didn't call the director as they didn't think it made any difference to the score, but discussed it with me later in the pub. I didn't get a chance to ask South why he chose that lead. Do you think it looks suspicious?"
Without UI, on this auction, South might well lead a major knave. North was thinking of bidding -- probably a major in the light of South's shape and strength. That reinforces the choice of a major lead over a minor.
Most players follow the advice in the "ACBL club directors' handbook": Make the lead you would have made without UI..
That seems wrong to me but the onus is on law-makers to simplify and clarify the rules enough for ordinary players like me to understand the gist of them.