Posted 2025-April-18, 19:33
I've been at a regional, and then, well, let's just say "other things".
So I haven't seen the last bit of this, including the hands.
I would *love* to know the lead to 3NT. If it's a spade, and not a heart, I'd really want to know why. A zero-entry hand that has three card support for a suit partner was willing to bid at the 3 level? (okay, convince me that 3♥ is a raise to 3♠ that wants a heart lead. But still, as sanst says, *south wants a heart lead!*) In fact, I'd be wondering about whether 4♥ is a logical call over a clearly speculative 3NT bid (unless 2NT was guaranteed to have INV values). Probably not - any hand (except, say, KQJTxxxx and out, I guess) that is getting 300 or 500 in 4♥ is setting 3NT on repeated heart leads.
A spade lead drips of Unauthorized Panic, the secondary version - "Sorry partner, bidding 4♠ to wake you up is too dangerous, so I'll lead them to wake you up instead." But assuming the second round duck of the A, it doesn't look like north ever gets in to run the spades. Having said that, if declarer *didn't* duck the second round of spades, they 100% are going to if told North has spades. Even my novices will find that one.
You know, when declarer calls me at the end of the hand because the defenders misexplained and she went down, if she went down because of the misinformation (as opposed to "they did something wrong, we deserve a good score" or "they did something wrong, what happens now?" I *guarantee* their answer to "do you do something different with the correct information" is Yes. In fact, they're likely screaming it at me before I get to ask the question (frankly, usually before I can ascertain what the table result was, sometimes even the contract!) Even if they're unsure, they're still answering Yes, and then when I ask what, *then* they go into the tank trying to recreate the play. More than 90% of the time misinformation actually affected the play, declarer knows exactly how (or at least when). Yes, I know that this time the defenders called the director (as they should). But still.
If you're trying to figure out how people can "understand the UI", tell them "you overcalled their 1NT with 2♥, to which partner dutifully announced 'Spades'. [if they try to argue here that partner didn't, just barrel through] Then, over 2NT lebensohl, partner bid 3♥. What does she have?" Now, you can accept "but she didn't". And then explain "and you're not allowed to know that, in fact you have to bid as if my scenario applied." Sometimes, it works. Eventually. If they're familiar with screens, you can phrase it as "you overcalled 2♥ showing spades, and the tray comes back with partner's 3♥. What does that mean?" Or if they're familiar with online self-Alerting, you can phrase it as "you overcalled 2♥ and explained it as spades, and partner bids 3♥. What does that mean?" But those two have the failing that the player will *automatically* say "oh partner must have forgot" (again, because of the UI they actually have). There's a reason some pairs score 3-5% worse at the virtual club than they do at the table - they have to guess whether "partner forgot" or if it's a normal auction online. They never have that problem at the table. And "I don't understand UI" (no, you just use it, and you don't even know it) is why.
When I go to sea, don't fear for me, Fear For The Storm -- Birdie and the Swansong (tSCoSI)