blackshoe, on 2021-June-16, 10:05, said:
Law 26B: When an offending player’s call is withdrawn and it is not replaced by a comparable call, then if he becomes a defender declarer may, at the offender’s partner’s first turn to lead (which may be the opening lead), prohibit offender’s partner from leading any (one) suit which has not been specified in the legal auction by the offender. Such prohibition continues for as long as the offender’s partner retains the lead.
There was clearly a director error, so I don't see how the appeal can be rejected.
In fact, it's not even an appeal (remember, an appeal committee can not overrule the director on a point of law (93B3), so if it was treated as an appeal, all the committee could do is read L26 to the director, and then suggest to her that she should apply 82C. Of course, the result could be appealed, but the ACBL at least discourages appeals on minor weighting "mistakes"). When the TD is made aware of her mistake, however this is done, she should trigger 82C herself.
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Law 82C: If a ruling has been given that the Director subsequently determines to be incorrect, and if no rectification will allow the board to be scored normally, he shall award an adjusted score, treating both sides as non-offending for that purpose.
[...]As for the defenders, well, "obviously I would have led a heart" is not going to fly.
Of course not. Especially after declarer exercises their *legal* option to deny the heart lead. Remember that we don't assign a score "without the infraction", we assign the score "without the TD's mistake". So we work out what would happen if, at the crucial time, declarer was told instead "you can bar any one suit". If it's obvious to bar hearts, then 6
♠x= for both sides *is* treating both sides as non-offending. If "it's a crapshoot", then you can't say that declarer would *never* bar a heart, and that E/W would *always* find a heart. If it's "well, either a heart or a club" - remember that declarer is entitled to know that LHO was willing to sacrifice in 6
♣, so we don't have to worry about a club ruff - then maybe N/S get 60% of it making and E/W get 60% of setting it.
I do agree that, in the cases where declarer doesn't bar hearts, there isn't a 100% chance of a heart lead, that should also be considered in the weighting (again, giving E/W more of a chance of finding it than N/S gets of having it missed).
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*I don't think a weighted score is appropriate here - if you weight the score, you're not treating the declaring side as non-offending. It seems to me that "treat both sides as non-offending" results in one of two "adjustments": either the declaring side gets the table score, and the defending side gets the score for 6♠X-1 (assuming down 2 or more is not possible), or the table result stands for both sides.
My previous comment talks about this bit. If you truly believe that it's a 50-50 chance that declarer would get it right, why is giving 100% of anything fair, when you can assign 50-50 score, and then tweak it the "standard" 10% or so in each side's favour?
When I go to sea, don't fear for me, Fear For The Storm -- Birdie and the Swansong (tSCoSI)