Bbradley62, on 2011-August-14, 23:22, said:
Is it a common occurrence for players to not know about rulings against them until the next day?
No. I shall fill in on some of the details.
This hand occurred during an evening club game, in one of the later rounds, with a playing director who had recently obtained his qualification. I was also playing, and was asked about the hand at the end of the session. Bridgeboy and his partner had left by then. Also, we both decided it would be best to consult the more senior directors the next day.
FWIW, West was not sure if there was damage, and both EW were not asking for any adjustments but also wanted to know what the correct ruling should be.
The rest of the facts that I was told/know:
- W said he could make a cue of 3
♦ if 2N was explained as minors, and felt he was unable to describe his hand in better detail after the 2N bid.
- After the 2NT bid, W waited a few seconds for an alert, didn't receive one, and doubled. After 3
♠, E asked what is 2N, and received a reply of "I don't know."
- After 2 passes, W now wondered if 2N was misexplained and was really the minors and if so, 4
♥ may be going down on bad breaks and so he doubled.
- S (bridgeboy) told W that 2N was meant to be minors after he put down dummy.
- NS play together on some club nights and in mixed pairs events.
Due to the late hour, these facts were presented to the two senior colleagues the following day. They both felt that there was damage due to the MI and that the score should be adjusted back to 4
♥+1.
I was the third, and I felt the same way as Pran did.
pran, on 2011-August-14, 12:59, said:
If I had been the Director North/South would have to convince me that they had no agreements.
If they failed to do so I would rule that the agreement is the meaning assumed by South and that opponents were misinformed. In my opinion this is consistent with Law 75C: [...]the Director is to presume Mistaken Explanation, rather than Mistaken Call, in the absence of evidence to the contrary[...]
There seems to be a worrying tendency towards accepting assertion of "no agreement" or "not discussed" as a general getaway from the duty to inform opponents.
(Whether East/West were damaged is of course a separate issue)
Personally, I am not completely convinced that this is entirely right, and I was planning to ask as well. Unfortunately I was not able to post earlier.
I must also add that when I informed Bridgeboy of the ruling, he did tell me that they had no prior agreement wrt the 2NT bid in that position, which made me even more doubtful. I'm not quite sure if there was some other misunderstanding along the way.
Feel free to tell me if I'm wrong. I'm more than happy to overturn the original ruling if this turns out to be the case.