“Very strange,” replied the learned doctor. “EW made 7S, 7H or 7NT at every table except one where NS made 6NT. It must have been mis-boarded on the last one, I assume.” “What were the NS hands?”
“No it was not mis-boarded, Watson,” “But did you not notice that when South made 6NT, East-West were a retired colonel playing with his disabled wife?"
“Good gracious, how did you deduce that?” came the response.
“Well, it was clearly a 5-table Howell movement, with 18 boards, and pair 10 was stationary, allocated to Colonel Cathcart and his wife Lady Cathcart who would have been unable to move. Also the Colonel always scores, even when he is East or West, using a distinctive purple ink, identical to his invitation to me to speak at the Rotary Club Christmas Dinner. Finally, Lady Cathcart, who has arthritis, uses one of those much criticised cardholders which have a habit of collapsing. Clearly her hand fell forward during the auction and she then had 13 penalty cards. When she became on lead, the declarer could direct her play at each trick. And I heard the TD, Professor Pedant, discussing the ruling as we arrived.”
“But surely that made no material difference?” pressed Watson rather dimly. “South could not have made 6NT”
“Not so, South could claim at trick one on the actual layout.” Holmes replied “Which is for you to work out, Watson.” He concluded. “And note that while all West’s cards are penalty cards, they are authorised to all players under Law 50E1 of the new 1917 Laws of Duplicate Bridge, so East is not constrained at all, unless he gains the lead. And I find that West can only make 7NT on a club lead, which I think makes the EW hands unique.
What were the exact EW cards which allowed South to make 6NT against best defence?
[With thanks to Nigel Guthrie, Cyberyeti, Julian Pottage and Paul Barden for cooks and corrections to my earlier feeble efforts. I hope the above is now unique! I thought I had found a way to eliminate the requirement that you could only make 7NT on a club lead, but gszes showed that was not the case. I also noted that in the main line, you have to cash the sixth club before the jack of diamonds, or you squeeze yourself in a non-material way. You are forced to decide on Weat's discard prematurely.