This hand is related by a reliable source, a member of the England semi-finalists in the Bermuda Bowl, although the exact hand has been guessed or reconstructed. East led the ace of spades out of turn and the director was called and gave declarer the five options, but did not make it clear that if declarer left the ace of spades as a major penalty card, then the fact that East held it would be UI to West. Declarer, not unreasonably, prevented a spade lead, but only had 12 tricks. The poster of the hand, on Facebook, thought that declarer should have left the ace of spades as a MPC and then East would have had to discard it on a top diamond. Others dissented, thinking that declarer is effectively barring a spade lead (because other leads are almost certain to be LAs) and also getting to take advantage of an MPC, and that is having his cake and eating it. Others thought that the fact that East had the ace of spades as an MPC was AI and West could lead a spade. Most posters were strong players but not usually directors. Some even thought that selecting "option 5", to leave the card as an MPC, was somehow unethical!
One or two posters thought that the TD should have made the options clearer to declarer. How would you rule, and would you consider a split score because of director error? It was not an EBU event, but I do not think that matters. And it does seem strange that this hand, which could indeed have been an "improbable hypothetical", appeared so soon after barmar's criticism of such posts. I have no reason to think this was constructed. I do not know whether a ruling was sought (other than the initial call) or whether one was given. The thread suggests that declarer did not "want to win" by selecting option 5 even if he could.
This post has been edited by lamford: 2015-May-26, 05:30