campboy, on 2014-August-13, 11:00, said:
NS are to be treated as non-offending. I don't think that is compatible with giving them an adjustment that is less than the result they actually obtained.
lamford, on 2014-August-14, 04:49, said:
I can't agree with this. If the director had ruled something like "Ah, yes, an opening bid out of turn, I think I know that one. The board is immediately scored using the par Deep Finesse score, and I see that is +140 for NS. Please enter that and play the next board." On your basis, you would give NS that (or 60% whichever is the greater), and EW 60%. And say that you swap East's two of clubs with South's two of diamonds. Now the par Deep Finesse NS score is +420 (the play is interesting for those that care) and now you would allow NS that score, as the director had given them that score erroneously!
Precisely!
The point is that Law 82C instructs the Director to judge whether he considers himself able to assess what would (probably) have happened if he had not failed in his ruling. If so he shall award an
assigned adjusted score accordingly, if not he shall award an
artificial adjusted score treating both sides as non-offending.
But in either case the table result obtained following the Director's error is as such void.