gnasher, on 2014-February-14, 02:46, said:
12C2 begins "When owing to an irregularity no result can be obtained [and see C1(d)]". Doesn't that mean that this applies both when the board is unplayable and when an adjustment is made under 12C1d?
No.
Think of this particular case: A result
was obtained (2
♥-1). The reference in 12C2 to Law C1(d) is there for those (rare) cases that 12C1d applies (a result was obtained) and it is absolutely, completely impossible to say what the
MP/IMP score would be without the infraction.
In this case, one could say that it is impossible to determine one accurate
bridge score (2
♦-4, 3
♦-5, 4
♦X-6, something else, varying from +100 NS to -1400 NS), but it is most likely not difficult at all to assign an accurate score in
MPs: No matter what the bridge score would be NS would get a (near) bottom on the board (varying between 0 en 10% NS).
12C1d is there to prevent the need for arbitrary constructions of weighted scores. We could argue for days about the exact weighting of the set of possible results [2
♦-4, 3
♦-5, 4
♦X-6, something else]. Law 12C1d gives us the power to say, e.g.:
90% will lead to NS going down in too high a diamond contract for a bottom for NS.
10% will lead to 'something else' -we don't know what, and then average would be the best guess.
90%x0% + 10%x50% = 5% for NS and 95% for EW."
This is entirely different from a situation where NS commit an infraction, get a complete top because of that, and we don't have a clue what would have happened without the infraction, neither in bridge score,
nor in MP score. In that case, you give the offenders Ave- and the non-offender Ave+.
(Say, South opens 2
♦ (weak, but explained as Benji Acol). As a result NS make a diamond partscore for +110, but EW can make game in hearts, spades and NT or slam in hearts (but not in spades) and NS can sacrifice in diamonds. All of these results -varying from +100 to -1430 in bridge scores for NS
and in MPs from 5 to 95% for NS- would be possible outcomes.)
Rik
I want my opponents to leave my table with a smile on their face and without matchpoints on their score card - in that order.
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