MP Pairs. Table Result 7NT=, EW+1510.
I had forgotten about this hand, exactly reproduced from a non-SB deal, until it reared its head again when I was asked to comment on the 2013 Appeal Hands recently. The above was the auction at the table next to me, and there was some fairly loud discussion between the players and the TD, but I must confess I did not hear what the kerfuffle was about. West intended his 4C bid as Gerber. East was unsure of their agreements and made a safety play of bidding 4♥. South was told "one ace" when asking before the opening lead. The rest is history as they say. The TD was called and she reported [inter alia]:
"I asked East for clarification of his 4♥ bid. He explained to all that he wasn’t too sure when he bid what the agreement was. It was probably A or B and 4♥ seemed the best bid to cater. He stated he was sure his partner was right about the agreement. I asked East why he did not say anything before the lead was made. He explained that he did not think he needed to because partner was right and he was wrong."
The TD allowed the score to stand but EW appealed on the basis that EW should have been given a PP for the failure to correct the wrong explanation to "no clear agreement" before the opening lead. However none of those polled led a diamond, and the eminent AC allowed the score to stand but did impose a PP on East, and returned the deposit.
Take Two. A few minutes later, I was South at the next table and the opponents had the uncontested auction 1NT-2S*(transfer to clubs)-3C (nothing special)-4NT (undiscussed)-5C-7NT-[Dble]-All Pass. I led a spade, and all I polled later on the auction led a major. My partner seemed to think all was not quite kosher here, and called the TD to say that the TD had been called on the second board of the previous round at the next table, and now the opponents bid a grand off a cashing ace and king. The Chief TD arrived and responded, almost verbatim:
“You will need more evidence than that to make such an accusation”. We shrugged and moved on, and I thought nothing much more of it until three years later, but the hand raises some interesting questions.
From a bridge point of view, what do you think the right lead is on each auction? There are strong arguments for a diamond when you analyse more deeply. In our case, we had no MI however, as West did answer "probably no keycards".
From a bridge point of view, what lead do you think double by North asks for on each auction? And if you think that this forum is for Laws only, I suggest you get out more!
As the TD would you have investigated what the discussion with the TD was about on the previous round and tried to establish whether there could have been UI from an external source?
Would you give any % of a diamond lead at the first table if you rule, as the TD and AC did, that there was MI?
Would you keep the score at the second table if West stated that he also had not overheard anything? Would you take into account that he thought that East had no key cards but still bid 7NT, or is that not relevant?
This post has been edited by lamford: 2016-March-28, 17:37