pran, on 2014-July-09, 05:39, said:
I agree that a weighted score is permissible here, but I would have ruled that declarer makes his contract by finding the Queen.
Why?
Mainly to teach East a lesson.
If the hesitation was accidental then East should (with his play) have said something to that effect. Without any such statement I rule deliberate violation of Law 73D2 and give Declarer the benefit of selecting the successful play 100% of the time.
pran, on 2014-July-09, 15:13, said:
"Restoring equity" is an obvious principle when there has been an inadvertent irregularity.
But I don't want to have players try gaining from an irregularity with the knowledge that they will always be guaranteed equity.
When an irregularity for instance affects the expectation of which line of play (among alternatives) will be successful, thereby causing an innocent player to select an unsuccessful line, then I want to "compensate" (for both sides) by adjusting according to a successful alternative line that would at all be probable.
Such compensation should never be reduced by weighting on the ground that the innocent player might have chosen a less successful line of play had there been no irregularity.
Can we not instead start by seeing what the Laws and the Regulations say, and by trying to apply those, instead of pursuing personal agenda?
First, perhaps it's appropriate to remind ourselves of what we should be trying to achieve:
Law 12B1 said:
B. Objectives of Score Adjustment
1. The objective of score adjustment is to redress damage to a non-offending side and to take away any advantage gained by an offending side through its infraction. ...
This does not appear to include teaching East a lesson.
Second, under the 2007 Laws the weighted score approach (Law 12C1(
c)) to adjusted scores became the norm with the older "most favourable / most unfavourable" approach relegated to an alternative (Law 12C1(e)) which a Regulating Authority may in its discretion decide to adopt in its place:
Law 12C1(c) said:
(c) In order to do equity, and unless the Regulating Authority forbids it, an assigned adjusted score may be weighted to reflect the probabilities of a number of potential results.
Law 12C1(e) said:
(e) In its discretion the Regulating Authority may apply all or part of the following procedure in place of (c):
(i) The score assigned in place of the actual score for a non-offending side is the most favourable result that was likely had the irregularity not occurred.
(ii) For an offending side the score assigned is the most unfavourable result that was at all probable.
The EBU (the Regulating Authority in this case) has decided it will use the weighted score approach, and eschew the option to revert to the 12C1(e) version. It does not seem appropriate to me to try and subvert this decision by the back door.
pran, on 2014-July-09, 07:52, said:
Sure, adjusted scores need not balance (Law 12C1f).
True, but the circumstances in which adjusted scores that do not balance arise are covered in the White Book 2013 (particularly 4.1.1.3 & 4.1.1.5), and do not include the circumstances in question; they are summarised at the end of 4.1.1.5 thus:
White Book 2013 4.1.1.5(d) said:
It is not normal to have an adjusted score that is both split and weighted except in these three situations, i.e. when the non-offenders get part of their redress reduced [essentially SEWOG], when both sides are treated as non-offending, and when both sides are treated as offending.
I have seen nothing, Pran, in what you have posted that convinces me that there is any justification for departing from the standard weighted score approach, supplemented, where there has been a deliberate attempt to mislead, by a Disciplinary (not Procedural) Penalty. We have a perfectly well-established process; why do you regard it as appropriate to subvert it?
Finally, in this particular case I understand that the elderly East has recently undergone a medical event that may have contributed to a momentary lack of concentration and to the unfortunate tempo etc. This in no way diminishes N/S's rights to redress, but it's as well to bear such possibilities in mind before starting on the re-education.