hrothgar, on 2014-May-27, 05:58, said:
North South appear to be playing an illegal agreement. (A damn stupid waste of a super accept as well, but that's hardly relevant) From the looks of things, the players tried to walk this back. However, that's neither here nor there.
Prevaricating offenders should get away with it, neither here nor there.
hrothgar, on 2014-May-27, 05:58, said:
My understanding is that this falls under the category of a procedural penalty, which means that the director has broad discretionary authority. Here's how I'd rule. Board is voided. Offending side loses this match. (Non offending side keeps their score absent this board). Offending side's team forfeits all match awards for previous victories for this tournament. Offending side's team is ineligible to place in the overalls.
Unfortunately, no director would ever rule that way, although it seems reasonable to consider previous boards and previous matches, when this pair might have benefited from illegal agreements.
hrothgar, on 2014-May-27, 06:52, said:
Comment 2: We have a "very experienced" pair who has been playing together as a partnership for years.Comment 3: The ACBL screws a lot of stuff up, but one thing that they are quite clear about is that you can't have an agreement to open 1NT with a singleton. I am a firm believer that people who break clear laws need to be made an example of.(its how you motivate people to learn the laws and to follow them) FWIW, back when my father was teaching college, every couple years he expel someone for plagiarism. Saying that someone doesn't have a chance to win a tournament when they broke the rules hardly seems that harsh.
Hrothgar and his father make more sense than "equity" lawyers.
Zelandakh, on 2014-May-27, 07:22, said:
Clearly the main thing that N-S did wrong is to be more helpful than they needed to be by admitting that this sequence came up before as a singleton ♠A. Most pairs would have conveniently forgotten this. If they had instead answered "No agreement on this so our meta rules say natural, a max hand unsuitable for spades" or some similar rubbish then they would have been completely ok.
Zelandakh is right that the offender's initial honesty is a mitigating factor although their subsequent back-tracking is a black-mark.
Zelandakh, on 2014-May-27, 07:22, said:
As experienced players they really should have known better than to answer truthfully at an ACBL event(!)
A complete explanation might create a significant precedent, in the UK, too
campboy, on 2014-May-27, 10:22, said:
No, two doubletons is ok; three is not. Four is right out
IMO, there should be no system restrictions, except, perhaps, for those in campboy's 3rd category.