Vampyr, on 2015-July-31, 16:11, said:
Wanoff has not, AFAICS agreed that such a bid with such a hand is within their agreements.
In the original post, wanoff said
wanoff, on 2015-July-29, 02:26, said:
In a later post, he said
wanoff, on 2015-July-29, 13:09, said:
The "but" in that first sentence does not make an agreement that such a hand might bid this way.
In between these two posts, he said
wanoff, on 2015-July-29, 04:27, said:
Whether he plays a "bog standard UCB" or not isn't really the issue. The point is that, to here, it looks to me like their agreement was that the cue bid shows just what he said it did: 'A high card raise to at least 2♠'. It then appeared to me that everyone seized on the fact that his partner didn't have that hand, and treated that fact as conclusive evidence that their agreement was more along the lines of 'A high card raise to at least 2♠ or any force that can control the auction'. I disagreed with that. However, what I missed is that in that middle post wanoff also said
wanoff, on 2015-July-29, 04:27, said:
Now, if this "as we all know" is knowledge generally available to bridge players (GBK), then there has been no MI, because he is not required to disclose GBK. But is it? I think perhaps we don't have all the facts, because of this, but also because the situation proceeded to a reprimand from the club's Laws and Ethics committee. However, given this comment, I think the director (and the AC if there was one) must presume mistaken explanation rather than mistaken bid. So while I still think wanoff's partner deviated from their explicit agreement, I suspect there may have been an implicit agreement to include the general force in the set of possible hands that would make the bid (though not solely from a one-sided "I read it somewhere"). So it now seems to me that there was probably MI, a violation of law 20F which might result in a score adjustment and maybe a procedural penalty. It seems though that there was also deemed to be a violation of Law 40C, and perhaps of Law 72B1. The former might be, and the latter certainly would be enough to invoke an L&E hearing. But all this is speculation — we do not have all the facts.