There was a lot of discussion in this thread about whether the
♠8 in trick 3 was a serious error or not. But this was of no concern to the AC - they (and probably the director, too) ruled that there was no link between the misinformation and the play:
Quote
Since declarer's play was no better than break even and could lose to the actual distribution, the damage was not a consequence of the misinformation but was only subsequent to it and was caused by declarer's faulty assumptions as to the lie of the cards.
Here, the AC is making fun of the declarer. If he is misinformed, of course he will make faulty assumptions. And these faulty assumptions made him play
♠8 in trick 3, which he fore sure would not have done if he got the correct information leading to more accurate assumptions. In order to decide that, the TD should have judged if East's pleading is comprehensible. What others play is only relevant when it shall be decided if the play was a serious error. Anybody who suggests that North would play
♠8 even if he got the correct information and therefore knows that there is a reasonable chance that West has a singleton
♦ also suggests that North is completely insane.
Some accuse North to make assumptions about the hand that are impossible or unlikely. But what should he really assume? N/S have 25 HCP, and for his "takeout" 2
♥ West should hold the majority of the E/W HCP. This means East doubled with very limited strength, and one should assume that he has a good length in
♥ containing Q and J in order to compensate for his weakness. Before leading to trick 3, North already knows that West has
♣AK, as East would probably not underlead his A. The question remains, who has
♠A? If West had the A, he really would be a little strong for his initial pass. But if he had not the A, he would be a little weak for his takeout. Also, if East had the A, why didn't he ever bid
♠? The situation is so difficult for North because, given E/W played the same system, the penalty double is insane with the hands they actually have. East doubled because he thought that West had more strength for his takeout and subsequent 3
♣ bid. He got it wrong. But when North gets it wrong, too, with the same wrong information, is it his own fault?
About the "serious error" question: Anybody posting in this thread has yet failed to provide a 52-card-layout that is consistent with the bidding and that contains a West hand that is consistent with the information North got, and where the play of
♠8 in trick 3 causes the contract to go down while it would make on drawing trumps. Only if such a layout could be found, you could argue that
♠8 was an error, and only if it was a quite possible and easy to imagine such a layout, you maybe could argue that it was a serious error. If such a layout cannot be found,
♠8 would be just obscure, as those who were polled said, but nothing one could really criticize. Please keep in mind that it does never hurt if East is short in
♦ as he would ruff with a trump that makes a trick anyway.
The TD, the AC and all in this thread who supported them may be excellent bridge players, but in my view fail to see the situation from North's point of view. The actual hand layout, where the
♠8 was really an error if North was provided with the correct information, seems to bias people against North. I am sure, if a hand like
had been posted, most would just shrug when learning that North played
♠8 in trick 3 - it simply does not matter.
One last comment to the AWM warning. The writeup says:
Quote
They (N/S) brought no new information to the committee that had not been disclosed to the directors and the consultants.
It is a well-known fact that in judgment cases often different people come to different conclusions based on exactly the same information. It must be possible to appeal if the appellant just thinks that the TD's decision is an minority view of the problem. A serious TD gives both sides the opportunity to present their case and delays his ruling until he has gathered all relevant information. According to this AC, it is always pointless to appeal against a decision of such a TD.
Karl
(always -1)