South hesitated for some time before making the initial Pass and after East's 1H opening bid, then bid 3S which was described as weak. East maintains she would not have doubled if she had known the hand only contained 5 losers and a void.
Another Misbid - perhaps
#1
Posted 2016-December-12, 15:58
South hesitated for some time before making the initial Pass and after East's 1H opening bid, then bid 3S which was described as weak. East maintains she would not have doubled if she had known the hand only contained 5 losers and a void.
#2
Posted 2016-December-12, 16:38
Chris3875, on 2016-December-12, 15:58, said:
South hesitated for some time before making the initial Pass and after East's 1H opening bid, then bid 3S which was described as weak. East maintains she would not have doubled if she had known the hand only contained 5 losers and a void.
No infraction, therefore no rectification.
#3
Posted 2016-December-12, 18:53
First of all: East isn't entitled to know what is in South's hand - only what agreement NS have as to what the 3♠ overcall means.
Secondly: North has UI in that South's hand is known not to be an obvious pass, however does the 3♠ overcall (AI) fully match the UI? Probably - and even if it didn't, is it likely that passing or doubling with the North hand is a LA had South passed in tempo. Well we'll have to poll on that. North has a pretty offensive orientated hand - 4 trumps support, an Ace, a singleton and knowledge that South must be very short in hearts (-1 is my guess).
Finally we look at law 74F
F. Violation of Proprieties
When a violation of the Proprieties described in this law results in damage to an innocent opponent, if the Director determines that an innocent player has drawn a false inference from a remark, manner, tempo, or the like, of an opponent who has no demonstrable bridge reason for the action, and who could have known, at the time of the action, that the action could work to his benefit, the Director shall award an adjusted score (see Law 12C).
It would appear that South does have a demonstrable bridge reason for pausing, so no redress under this law.
Get the facts. No matter what people say, get the facts from both sides BEFORE you make a ruling or leave the table.
Remember - just because a TD is called for one possible infraction, it does not mean that there are no others.
In a judgement case - always refer to other TDs and discuss the situation until they agree your decision is correct.
The hardest rulings are inevitably as a result of failure of being called at the correct time. ALWAYS penalize both sides if this happens.
#4
Posted 2016-December-13, 04:30
Chris3875, on 2016-December-12, 15:58, said:
#5
Posted 2016-December-13, 08:52
sanst, on 2016-December-13, 04:30, said:
I think the OP says that South paused on all calls EXCEPT after the double! (Before his initial pass, and before the 3S bid.)
To cover the question of UI from the hesitations: what do they demonstrably suggest? The first pause suggests South is close to an opening bid of some sort, and North made an obvious pass - no problem. After the 3S bid you can probably deduce he was close to an opening of 3S or 1S or 4S... or maybe 2S... so overall it doesn't really demonstrably suggest anything. Likewise, the second pause could be because South is deciding between 2S and 3S, or 3S and 4S. Either way North has a raise to 4. So no problem there.
For the MI: this is a bit harder. Clearly the South hand is too strong to be called a "weak" pre-empt. We need to look at whether South has done this kind of thing before with the same partner and hence whether North's explanation was perhaps incomplete, e.g. "weak to intermediate" or "pre-emptive, but conservative at this vul" or whatever. If so, and if we believe East (perhaps we poll?), then we'll adjust to 4S undoubled; otherwise, result stands.
Even then, I think both the 4H bid and double are SEWoG or very close to it (e.g. put the DK in North), though EW may escape based on the fact that those calls aren't strictly unrelated to the infraction.
ahydra
#6
Posted 2016-December-13, 10:31
weejonnie, on 2016-December-12, 18:53, said:
Yes, particularly after discovering the ♠Ax which he had in with his hearts the previous round of bidding.
#7
Posted 2016-December-13, 10:52
#8
Posted 2016-December-13, 12:11
What is baby oil made of?
#9
Posted 2016-December-13, 16:06
As far as the explanations go, maybe there is a misexplanation, if partner expects this hand. If not, it could just be that South has never seen this hand before and doesn't know how to bid it. Also, everybody knows, or they should, that pass-then-preempt is not going to have a traditional preempt.
East is not entitled to the opponents bidding the same way she does, or evaluating hands the same way. It's also why I don't use the term "weak" opposite a passed hand, never mind by a passed hand. "Preemptive". Having said that, East won't be that much happier when South's hand is JT9xxxx -- KTxx Tx and North has ♠Kxxx and the same hand, is she? Similarly, she's not going to want to remove the double when the hearts are 2=2 instead of 4=0?
Sympathy, but there's nothing illegal here. -990, next hand, please. It won't be the last time.
#10
Posted 2016-December-13, 17:22
mycroft, on 2016-December-13, 16:06, said:
+1
"Robin Barker is a mathematician. ... All highly skilled in their respective fields and clearly accomplished bridge players."
#11
Posted 2016-December-14, 00:00
I deserved it then and EW deserve it now.