24-board knockout match. Table result: EW 6♠X-1, NS+200
Two local players from a Brighton club have been attending the excellent Really Easy Congress here at Brighton and listening to the fine seminars in the morning. Sadly, that has made them easy prey to our friend who looks and behaves like the Secretary Bird, who has been revelling in his recent coup, and he now always asks for the whole auction to be explained before his final pass. On this hand from a match last night, West, a local player named Walter, had agreed fit jumps with his partner only the previous day, and thought he had changed his RKCB responses to 41/30, both recommended in one of the seminars. SB, South, saw little point in doubling 5♣, but when East, the club rabbit, corrected his partner's explanation of 5♣ just after South had passed out 6♠, his ears pricked up. "I refused to play that 41/30 system," said East, "and you can see that we have 30/41 on both our cards, which I printed out this morning to make sure they were identical." SB had briefly considered saving over 6♠, but actually passed, and he now called the TD, who offered him his last call back, without any strings attached, and SB chose to substitute a lightner double, asking for a club lead. He suspected that EW might be off two keycards, and his keen sense of danger alerted him to the potential layout. North dutifully led a club, and South ruffed, gaining 13 IMPs against 5♠+1 in the other room.
SB rubbed salt into the wound by stating that this was the first hand he could recall in which a lightner double had been made with a singleton ace of trumps since The Rabbit tried it unsuccessfully a few weeks ago. The director looked at the hand and did not think that South's original final pass "could well have been influenced by misinformation", as South was not entitled to know that the opponents were having a misunderstanding, and he wondered if he had made a director error. East-West's teammates were considering an appeal on this basis. How would you rule as a referee or as an AC? And would you consider a non-balancing adjusted score? Needless to say the match depends on it.