lamford, on 2011-March-08, 11:54, said:
Yes, I believe going off in 5S is a serious error. I don't find anything to indicate that the event was played in England, and I am not aware where the poster is from, so I only looked at 12C1(b) which applies everywhere. The pair were clearly not beginners, as they used unassuming cue bids. If they were beginners, then I would completely agree with you; if they were intermediate, or whatever "local" players are (pub bridge players I presume), then I disagree. The Wbridge computer program - which is probably intermediate strength - had no trouble making 5S here. Yet that makes other errors which you would classify as serious, like passing cue bids occasionally. It requires no fine analytical skill to make 5S. If declarer could put a cold contract on the floor and still get redress, then why bother having 12C1(b)?
The title says EBU. Even if VixTD has recently started to direct events for the Estonian Bridge Union, he would need to have regard to guidance from the WBF.
WBFLC minutes 2008-10-10#3 said:
A serious error should be judged according to the calibre of player.
"Failing to make that contract was an error. Even Paul's computer program made it so it must be a serious error" is a novel approach.
A better approach would be to assume that your computer had been programmed to declare hands as follows; take any obvious ruffs in dummy, then draw trumps, then work out what to do next. That it how many "local" players think. It could be argued that a player who normally adopts this strategy is just playing to his normal standard and may not have made an "error" at all, let alone a serious one. The fact that it would be routine for a Helgemo or a Lamford to make eleven tricks is hardly relevant.
Suppose that you were the non-offending declarer on some hand where the best (and winning) line was a backwash squeeze, but you missed this line at the table and drifted one off. Would you expect the TD to deny you redress for any earlier infraction by your opponents on that basis? "Helgemo made the same contract and my computer program, called Deep something, also had no difficulty in making it. Surely I'd expect Lamford to play at least as well as Deep something, which seems to have even less clue in the auction that Wbridge"
lamford, on 2011-March-08, 12:24, said:
OK, I missed that. Then I agree it would be "especially lenient" to let the declarer off - although I am not adjusting anyway. Going off in 5S seems about equivalent to "ducking the setting trick against a slam". I have certainly done that myself before, as I expect most of us have.
And out of interest, how would opening a weak NT with a 20-count be "subsequent to the infraction" and lead to a contract which was only reached "as a consequence of the infraction"? I struggle to construct the scenario here - perhaps I lack imagination in coming up with hands. I guess we need a strong pass to start.
As I read it, opening a weak NT with a 20-count was given as an example of the type of call which might be considered a serious error; nowhere was it claimed that it was subsequent to any infraction.