As the authors of the Blue Book should know, and TDs too, is that the Milton Work count (A=4, K=3 etc.) is an easy but rather poor method to establish the worth of a hand. Besides, “strong” is anyway in the eye of the beholder (and the RA). In Holland “strong” is defined as at least a king above average.
When I trained to become a director, we were told that you, when called at a table, you should ask yourself three questions:
[1]Is there an infraction?
[2]Is there damage to the NOS?
[3]Is the damage (partly) caused by the infraction?
In this case the answer to 2 is “no”; the remark about RR not bidding 2
♠ is self-serving.
Something else: the fact that E and W both agree that such a hand should be opened 2
♣ doesn’t prove that they have an agreement to do so. Hands like these are rare and probably never discussed, not even by the sages who wrote the Blue Book. I’m wondering which card they would put on the table or, for that matter, anyone playing a strong club system. I can’t imagine anyone playing bridge at a reasonable level not opening this hand with a strong bid.
There’s also a problem if E opens 1
♥ and NS reach 4
♠ with W passing with
♣Axxxxx and nothing else. And a 4
♥ opening is even worse.