bluejak, on 2012-November-03, 19:49, said:
I do not think it is as simple as you suggest, Rik. Rulings are given as though there was no infraction - but that does not mean the non offenders know there was a misunderstanding. So consider this: you hold the West hand: 1NT by RHO, you bid 2♣, 2♠ by LHO, alerted and described as transfer to clubs, pass, pass to you. What do you bid?
You can poll, but I think it is pretty clear cut to pass. As a rule of thumb, it is clear cut to pass it out if the opponents pass an artificial and forcing bid. This is even more true when they are vulnerable. And that is even more true at IMPs.
If they are extremely lucky, the opponents are in a 5(opener)-3(responder) spade fit and 2
♠ is their best contract. But it is about as likely that they are in a 5-0 fit. It is also possible that they have a misunderstanding. And to top it of: They may well belong in 3NT or 5
♣ (or 6
♣, or 7
♣). (And if they indeed have a 5-3 spade fit they might even belong in 4
♠.) For West to make any call other than pass is a silly error. It can't win and it can only lose. Anybody who thinks bidding is right will probably also think that the famous Fredin double
1 was correct.
When I assign adjusted scores, I try to avoid weighting in results that are based on a blundering NOS.
Rik
1 At some high level championship, BB or EC, or something like that, Peter Fredin's RHO passed his partner's 4
♠ cuebid in a convoluted slam auction. Peter had something like
♠KQT9xx. He had a brain fart. Instead of passing it out, he doubled and the opponents promptly bid the cold slam. (I even think it was a grand.)
I want my opponents to leave my table with a smile on their face and without matchpoints on their score card - in that order.
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