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However, you need to congratulate East on coming up with an imaginative call that catered to both cases of pard 'forgetting' and 'remembering' their agreements.
Is this a cause for congratulation? I thought fielding a misbid was considered an offence.
I gave the ruling and discussed it with both team captains and the opposing team's legal expert. We were all agreed that there was no misinformation, but when I raised the question of East's decision to bid 3
♣, we all agreed it had, as Iviehoff says, "a slight whiff about it". We thought that most players would just bid 3NT without bothering to look for a heart fit, and that 3
♣ could cater for this very situation. I found myself alone in arguing for no adjustment, but I eventually persuaded them that this should be classified as an amber misbid.
When I first came across the concept of fielding, I was taught to ask myself "Has the psycher's / misbidder's partner taken unexplained action that could mitigate against possible detrimental effects of the psyche / misbid?" Here I think we are dealing not with
unexplained action, as his action is perfectly reasonable, but it is one that caters for a misbid from partner.
If this doesn't count as amber, then I confess I don't know what the amber category is for.
It was gratifying to see both legal teams arguing for a score which disadvantaged their side (I was team-mate of NS).