officeglen, on Jan 15 2007, 10:27 PM, said:
Then I would give average to each pair. For the 2♣ side this change of result will be painful enough to draw their attention to following the rules, while for the star player, and their partner, they would have to be content with not suffering the bad result. This is not the "perfect" ruling as required by the laws, but it is the type of ruling found in club games, where the TD is attempting to motivate players to follow the rules without seeming to be too harsh in doing so.
I hope not. It seems to me to be both the counter to the letter and the spirit or the rules.
This one seems very simple to me. Was the 2
♦ bid alerted or not? If it was, then there's clearly no damage- regardles of whether or how the 2
♣ bid was alerted, any explanation of 2
♦ as a non-natural bid would clarify it.
On the other hand, if there was no alert of the 2
♦ bid, then there clearly was damage. To me, the X does not seem speculative given the auction so far. If 2
♣ is natural, then we're looking at a bad misfit on their part, including what appears to be a likely 4-3 ending place with 18 or fewer HCP. If the 'star' had been a novice I'd have adjusted it to remove the X (face to face) or A+/A-.
Although...maybe I've been watching too many cop shows, but...look at this auction.
1NT (usual)
2
♣ (I have a club suit)
P
2
♦ (No! I can't stand clubs! Our combined diamonds have to be better than our clubs).
X (I have lots of good diamonds...let's crush these punks!)
2
♥ (Nooo! Not diamonds! Anything but that! Let's run to hearts, it can't be as bad as diamonds!)
X (And now, you die).
P (good luck, P!)
Now let's think about this. Opener, hearing nothing from me, doubled a natural two diamond bid. I don't think he did that with only three diamonds across a possible 0 count. I have four diamonds, partner has four diamonds, the diamond bidder surely has at least five diamonds...that leaves zero for for the club bidder.
West:
♠ xxx
♥ xxxx
♦ xxxxx
♣ x
East:
♠ xxx
♥ xxxx
♦ Void
♣ xxxxxx
North:
♠ xxxx
♥ xx
♦ xxxx
♣ xxx
If I believe the bidding is honest, the hands must look something like this. OK, sure, E-W might have two seven card major suit fits, but that's a heck of a thing to assume. The opponents have a great natural crossruff...in fact, they may have four diamond ruffs. So, if I believed them, would I really X them? And given that I doubled them, would I really lead a diamond? I mean, look at those hands. Looks to me like them getting 5 ruffs is not going to be difficult, and with 16-18 hcp between them, they can probably get 3-4 tricks on points. You have to lead a heart.
The double bothers me, but the lead bothers me more. The lead says 'somebody here is lying' when there's nothing about the auction that says that's the case.
No adjustment, unless the player can't count to 13.