IMPs; Lead 8♦; Table Result NS+2210
This was an interesting hand from a match at the local Woodenhead Bridge Club in North London last night. North was the most ethical player in the club, and South looks and behaves like the Secretary Bird. The auction needs some explaining. The TD thought South was regretting his 4D cue the moment he made it and bid a very slow 4S to try to put the brakes on the auction opposite an ethical partner (denied by SB, of course, who said that he was thinking of making a move with his crisp values and excellent 5431 shape). North suspected SB, and decided to punish him by leaping to 7S, a contract he knew could have no chance, as South clearly had not wanted to make a slam-try. West led a diamond, but SB, whose card play is about as good as his knowledge of the Laws, won in dummy, ruffed a diamond, cashed two high trumps, finessed a heart, ruffed a diamond, crossed to the ace of hearts and drew the last trump, East discarding a club. Now declarer cashed the ten of diamonds to catch East in a rare trump squeeze in a blocked position. Winning 17 IMPs against 4S+2 in the other room.
East-West were not happy but the TD, who was fully conversant with the Philadelphia WBFLC minutes, had to decide whether North's 7S was a) "impossible to contemplate" and therefore not an LA, and b) if so whether it carefully avoided taking any advantage of the UI. EW argued that the bid chosen by the player was always an LA, as it must have been contemplated by him, and the UI had elevated the chances of 7S being successful from something like 10^-10 to 10^-7 (East's hand has to be exactly as it is, pip for pip, to make), so it was "demonstrably" suggested, applying the "campboy rule".
At the end of the hand, SB was gloating that, after a rounded-suit lead, even he would fail, but West was 8-5 on to let it through as he tended to lead randomly. After giving SB his PP, how would you rule?
IMPs; Lead 8♦; Table Result NS+2210
This was an interesting hand from a match at the local Woodenhead Bridge Club in North London last night. North was the most ethical player in the club, and South looks and behaves like the Secretary Bird. The auction needs some explaining. The TD thought South was regretting his 4D cue the moment he made it and bid a very slow 4S to try to put the brakes on the auction opposite an ethical partner (denied by SB, of course, who said that he was thinking of making a move with his crisp values and excellent 5431 shape). North suspected SB, and decided to punish him by leaping to 7S, a contract he knew could have no chance, as South clearly had not wanted to make a slam-try. West led a diamond, but SB, whose card play is about as good as his knowledge of the Laws, won in dummy, ruffed a diamond, cashed two high trumps, finessed a heart, ruffed a diamond, crossed to the ace of hearts and drew the last trump, East discarding a club, and cashed the ten of diamonds to catch East in a rare trump squeeze in a blocked position. Winning 17 IMPs against 4S+2 in the other room.
East-West were not happy but the TD, who was fully conversant with the Philadelphia WBFLC minutes, had to decide whether North's 7S was a) "impossible to contemplate" and therefore not an LA, and b) if so whether it carefully avoided taking any advantage of the UI. EW argued that the bid chosen by the player was always an LA, as it must have been contemplated by him, and the UI had elevated the chances of 7S being successful from something like 10^-10 to 10^-7 (East's hand has to be exactly as it is, pip for pip, to make), so it was "demonstrably" suggested, applying the "campboy rule".
At the end of the hand, SB was gloating that, after a rounded-suit lead, even he would fail, but West was 8-5 on to let it through as he tended to lead randomly. After giving SB his PP, how would you rule?