DaveB, on 2015-April-28, 05:45, said:
Director ruling was result stands.
South statement was that his hesitation was determining the meaning of the 5♠ bid.
Once he had decided it was non forcing he passed.
Hence the decision to bid 6♠ could not demonstrably have been suggested as required by L16B.
Also in an auction as murky as this, a hesitation is to be expected so conveys little or no information.
South had already expressed an interest in 6♦ with the 4♥ bid.
I hadn't previously quoted this post, but I think that it is critical to one's views on the matter.
I have always understood that a TD ought to apply what is known in law as an objective test. This serves to avoid the invidious idea that the outcome of a BIT situation will depend on the TD's view of the honesty of the player concerned. As it is, most inexperienced or ignorant players, who see their score adjusted because of their BIT, often express feelings of outrage that the TD didn't accept their innocent explanations, and fail to appreciate that the TD ought never to be sitting in judgement of their honesty.
The only question the TD should be interested in, in terms of a ruling, is whether, to a North who observed the BIT, that BIT would logically suggest that S might well be thinking of doing something other than pass. The actual reason for S's BIT means nothing, unless it was a reason that would be seen by an objective observer as the most probable.
FWIW, and it isn't worth much since belief in S's motives is irrelevant, as a TD, I would have grave reservations about the explanation given by S. I can't think of any reason why S should ever think that 5
♠ was forcing....when did N ever previously support spades, and how could he compete in spades other than by bidding 5
♠, assuming he had a 3
♦ call earlier? Now, I am not accusing S of misstating anything, and indeed you can see from this precisely why it is that a TD ought not to be weighing S's credibility. Once we start doing that, then we get the terrible situation that the outcome will be determined by the TD's personal views of South's honesty. Rule against N-S, and they can and will infer that the TD thought S was lying.
A TD who thinks as I do would end up being seen as calling S a liar. A TD who accepted the explanation and ruled that S's inner thinking meant that N couldn't have been influenced would be seen by E-W as playing favourites. It gets ugly quickly once the TD is making decisions like that.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari