Posted 2023-January-31, 18:12
In this case, you have to ask the Director what she did. Just "skipping" a board scheduled to be played without a legal reason isn't legal, as you probably know - so what "skipping" means in this case doesn't have a legal meaning, so we can't tell you what "skipped board" should score.
My first guess would be that she considered this too complicated to fix, and hoped it would go away by treating it as "not played". In which case, she'd set the scoring program the same way she "not played"s a late play, and go from there. Your score will be factored by N+1/N to balance. I may be biased by ACBLScor here; see previous answers about "NPing late plays".
My second guess (which has the benefit of being legal, if lazy) is that she ruled that the information was such that the board could not be played, and assigned an adjusted score. I would hope that score was Average plus to E-W (not at fault) and Average minus to N-S (at fault); that is 60% or session score (whichever is higher) for E-W, and 40% (or session score if lower, but most scoring systems don't know to do that, and nobody really cares) to N-S. Law 12C2a.
But all it is is a guess. The director did what she did, and only she knows what she did. Ask her.
As discussed however, there is a better solution with UI and LAs and all the rest. p-p-2NT-p; 3C (Stayman)-AP seems normal. If that didn't happen at the table, the Director gets to do the use-of-UI song and dance, likely leading to some negative score. The downside of this is (as discussed before) in general[*] it takes a long time (which playing directors don't have), it requires peers to query (which she may not have until *they've* played the board, and they'll be biased from having seen it); depending on the timing, it might cause the board to be unplayable at her table (and causing another "skip" - I rule A+/A on those as I don't consider myself totally at fault for doing my job) - and frankly, it's beyond the competence of many club directors, and A+/A- would end up being fairer than whatever result they assign.
[*] This one's pretty straightforward. I don't see any LA to Stayman with 4-4 majors and a 7 count, and when partner states their choice of minor, South has nothing more to think about. I first wrote as if N was flipped - 3244 with the A and K. Then 3NT from North seems obvious, and what South is allowed to do from there depends very strongly on what their opening 2NT range is. That one could get very complicated.
When I go to sea, don't fear for me, Fear For The Storm -- Birdie and the Swansong (tSCoSI)