billw55, on 2014-December-03, 07:38, said:
I guess south is not allowed to change his double to pass, or else he would do so.
Anyway, agree with no damage, I don't think a spade lead against 2NT is very likely.
Players of the NOS can change only their last call, and then only if it was not followed by a call from partner (Law 21).
It seems this happened in North America. Here, Law 12C1{e} specifies
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For an offending side the score assigned is the most unfavorable result that was at all probable had the irregularity not occurred.
So the question is not whether a spade lead is likely, but whether it is "at all probable".
That same law says
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The score assigned in place of the actual score for a non-offending side is the most favorable result that was likely had the irregularity not occurred.
So the question here is what favorable results are likely, and then which one is most favorable. But all this depends on whether there was damage:
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Damage exists when, because of an infraction, an innocent side obtains a table result less favorable than would have been the expectation had the infraction not occurred
So what would have been the expectation had the infraction not occurred? Perhaps not 2NT failing, but 2NT making 2 is better for the NOS than 3
♦ making 4. So if 2NT making two is the expectation, there was damage.
To me the interesting point here, though, is that if the TD rules that 2NT was the expectation, so that there was damage and the score should be adjusted, then I think that for the OS, it seems the "most favorable (to the NOS) result that was likely" is 2NT making, while possibly the "most unfavorable result that was at all probable" for the OS might be 2NT down 1. Split scores, but that's not a problem (per 12C1{f}). And yes, I realize that the TD would be assigning to the NOS the score for a result that was rejected as a determiner of whether there was damage. That's the interesting point: it seems to me that even though it was rejected for damage-determining purposes, it's still a possible adjustment for the OS, because the criteria are different.