What happens after this auction?
#1
Posted 2014-October-16, 11:30
P P P X /
P P P
At this stage the director is called.
This actually happened to a friend of mine several years ago (he somehow attracts this kind of thing...). The director at the time ruled that the person in 3rd was playing in 0NTx. When they duly made on the nose, they scored 0*2 for the tricks above the book, plus 50 for the part score, plus 50 for the insult.
I've never heard of a director who agreed with the ruling, but I don't think I've ever heard what it should actually be. (let's assume modern laws for the sake of an easy life)
#2
Posted 2014-October-16, 11:34
I think it's a pass out, in which case someone should probably have redoubled (which still comes to zero).
#3
Posted 2014-October-16, 11:50
#4
Posted 2014-October-16, 12:51
PhilKing, on 2014-October-16, 11:34, said:
Yes, I was just describing the scoring method used at the time - otherwise it might not be clear how someone scored 100.
#5
Posted 2014-October-16, 18:05
As said upthread, Law 36A governs, but Law 19A1 is also germane:
Quote
Quote
Note: pass is a call, it is not a bid. There were no bids in the given auction, which is why Law 19A1 applies and the double is inadmissible.
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#6
Posted 2014-October-16, 18:08
#8
Posted 2014-October-17, 03:05
jeffford76, on 2014-October-16, 11:50, said:
But SB will argue that there could be a law 23 adjustment if the director decides that 4th in hand could have been aware that his infraction would benefit his side. SB would argue that 4th in hand has now learned that the two opponents would not bid on the second round after the auction P P P X or after the auction P P P X P, so they probably do not have a five-card major. SB would further argue that under 72B1, a player must not infringe a Law intentionally, and this breach of 19A1 was clearly intentional, unless 4th in hand selects a Pass, in the same area of the bidding box. Selecting any bid would strongly suggest a breach of 72B1. SB would further argue that any replacement call must not use the UI that partner would have passed after the withdrawn auction P P P X P P. SB would further argue .... (at this point men in white coats whisk SB away).
#9
Posted 2014-October-17, 05:24
blackshoe, on 2014-October-16, 18:05, said:
More's the pity; the ruling was hilarious.
#10
Posted 2014-October-17, 07:33
lamford, on 2014-October-17, 03:05, said:
Interesting point. He can also probably rule out misfitting 10-11 counts with a misfit for P's no suits, on which they might have XXed.
#11
Posted 2014-October-17, 14:59
"You bid by playing a card from your hand. That is the number of *tricks* (not odd tricks) you are taking, in that trump suit. Play and score normally. If the contract is lower than the 7 of clubs (== 1♣), score it as 50 for the partscore, plus overtricks (doubled and/or with insult as appropriate)."
Also, cue Machlin's story about the pros playing around for a round:
p-p-p-p;
1♣-p-1♥-p;
1♠-p-p-p
Played, making 2. "The LOL opponents probably didn't even notice when they scored it passed out on the traveller."