dburn, on 2011-February-17, 19:13, said:
Law 16 requires only that it be "illogical" to play the opponents for ten spades. Law 73, on the other hand, requires (more or less) that it be "completely impossible" to play the opponents for ten spades. This discrepancy has been highlighted before, and will be highlighted again, but nothing very much will be done about it.
campboy, on 2011-February-17, 19:19, said:
If it more or less requires that it be completely impossible, is that stronger or weaker than completely requiring that it be more-or-less impossible?
Yes and no, up to but not necessarily beyond a point that might or might not be established or even apparent.
The truth is that, just as it was shortly after the epic voyage of Harold Vanderbilt on the SS Finland, whether or not you're as bent as a nine-bob note is still largely a matter of perception. Consider what a pair of out-and-out benders would do on this deal.
After 1
♦-Dble, North bids 1
♥ thinking (however temporarily) that this shows hearts. South informs the assembled company that 1
♥ in fact shows spades. East bids 2
♣, South bids 3
♠, West passes and North... well, what's his problem? Partner has a spade stop, so North bids 3NT. Acts of nitwittery subsequently occur when somebody doubles and nobody defends, but these are not particularly relevant.
Now, when something happens that is exactly what would have happened had North-South been Bonnie and Clyde or Henry Gondorff and Johnny Hooker, East-West are entitled to call in the constabulary. Should North, they enquire, be allowed to bid 3NT? Should South be allowed to pass it?
Various learned arguments are advanced to the effect that once East bid clubs, South bid 3
♠ and West did not double, North had sufficient AI to know that he had cocked up the auction, and that South might therefore not have what he would have if he had (say) explained 1
♥ on request as showing hearts. The merits of those arguments rely on East-West's tendency to bid as you or I would bid if we had spades - but they are under no obligation to do that.
Various other learned arguments are advanced to the effect that from North's point of view, South might well have explained 1
♥ as showing hearts, but have bid 3
♠ anyway because he had lots of spades and lots of diamonds and lots of points (too many of either or both to bid a mere 2
♠.) The merits of those arguments rely on the extent to which South, East and West are prepared to go into the witness box and certify themselves as lunatics (how can West have a double, East a free bid, South a jump reverse, and North what he has?) But no one is under any obligation to be sane either, so these arguments have about the same force as those above.
Still, if you are inclined to credit any of the above arguments, you will be inclined to support the view that the table result should stand. Your view may be reinforced when you learn that North-South "do not play splinters in competition" and "play 2
♠ as natural and non-forcing in the sequence 1
♦-Double-1(natural)
♥-2
♣-2
♠". If you happen to be the Tournament Director or the Appeals Committee in this case you will rule accordingly, and the strains of Scott Joplin's "The Entertainer" will accompany your entrance while the strains of his "The Easy Winners" will accompany your exit.
If on the other hand you believe as I do that North took it upon himself to correct South's impression that North had spades by bidding as he would not have bid if under the impression that South knew North had hearts, you will... well, you may someday finish fourth in the Tollemache. But you'll sleep at night.