bluejak, on 2012-May-25, 06:18, said:
He is playing an artificial convention that is very rare in England - the vast majority play 2NT as either natural or balanced - and he did not explain it. Please could someone explain to me why he deserves a good board for not explaining it.
This is quite a common situation in MI cases.
[a]. The original explanation is not as thorough as it might have been (the explainer is at fault); but
[b]. The questioner could have protected himself by asking a follow-up question, but failed to do so (the questioner could have easily prevented the situation, so in that sense the questioner is also at fault).
In such cases, one could come to different conclusions reading the Law.
Possible Conclusion 1. The call was based on the player's own misunderstanding, Law 21A (is there an equivalent of this Law for plays?) and he was damaged by the failure to protect himself. Therefore the table result stands for both sides.
Possible Conclusion 2. The call/play would (or might) have been different had a thorough explanation being offered and "therefore" he was damaged by the misinformation. Therefore adjust the score (possibly weighted, but not split) for both sides.
Possible Conclusion 3. The call/play would (or might) have been different had a thorough explanation being offered and "therefore" he was damaged by the misinformation. Therefore adjust the score (possibly weighted) for the explainer's side.
However, the reliance on the incomplete answer and the failure to ask a follow-up question constitute a "wild or gambling action", so all of the damage is deemed to be self-inflicted and the questioner keeps the table score.
Perhaps we need guidance on how we decide between Possible Conclusions 1, 2 and 3.
VixTD, on 2012-May-25, 07:37, said:
I wasn't happy awarding 100% of 6♠-1, as I thought that North might well have played the same way given a correct explanation. I awarded both sides 70% 6♠(W)= and 30% 6♠(W)-1. Perhaps I was too hard on North. The referee thought that 50%-50% would have been more equitable when EW appealed, but he upheld the director's decision. He added that an expert North would not have received a favourable adjustment.
The 70/30 weighting seems fair to me. An important point to note is that, even with a complete understanding of the E/W methods, North could expect that his ♥A was very likely to be a trick, so based on the information available to the TD, there is a high chance that this particular North would have played ♠10 anyway.