sanst, on 2022-February-12, 02:59, said:
That’s not what I read in the Laws, not to mention the complexity of your solution. The TD should take away ‘any accrued advantage’ (11A). “The Director in awarding an assigned adjusted score should seek to recover as nearly as possible the probable outcome of the board had the infraction not occurred.” (12C1b). The infraction was the inadmissible double. Had that not occurred EW would in all probability have scored -100. You shouldn’t consider what would have happened had the TD been called in time, because that didn’t happen.
Using your method there’s a not insignificant chance that EW still get a result that’s better than the rest of the field, which certainly is not what the lawmakers had in mind when they wrote 11A if the commentary is a guideline.
An analyis of the case.
E made an insufficient call, noticed and made motions to change it (which would be subject to L25). However, S first drew attention to the insufficient call (where L36 prescribes the remedy) and imposes a penalty that includes canceling the X, mandating a pass. While such penalty does not comport with L36 it is circumscribed by L36 (in other words L36 would have provided additional options to E); and what that means is that L36 did not compel E to name a contract (had it been properly applied).
As an aside, had S not intervened and E changed his call and S then calls the TD, if the TD finds that the change was not a L25A correction then S has the option to condone or not. If not there now is an insufficient X subject to L36.
Regarding L11
If the NOS acts after an irregularity and before the director has explained his ruling, such action may condone the irregularity or diminish the available redress.
Which makes it clear that if the NOS doesn't get the TD involved sooner than later, they can screw themselves. But, that is not what the law book says:
The right to rectification of an irregularity may be forfeited if either member of the
non-offending side takes any action before summoning the Director. If a side has
gained through subsequent action taken by an opponent in ignorance of the relevant
provisions of the law, the Director adjusts only that side’s score by taking away any
accrued advantage. The other side retains the score achieved at the table.
The above can be replaced by the word gobbledygook and be more useful. This policy of using the word rectification has tied bridge into knots.
When someone says 'If a side has gained' just what is it that the gain is against? As for this case, to which irregularity does it refer? The insufficient X, south's improper conduct of adjudicator, something else? After all, the insufficient X was penalized by south wasn't it?