MPs, EBU Online tournament.
ChCh has been reading the new EBU SkyBlue Book with interest, in particular trying to find a way to use his doctorate in sharp practice. He found a suitable ruse on the hand above, which was all the more satisfying as it was against the Secretary Bird, West. It was the second board of a two-board round in the weekly North London pairs and the latter opened a very thin 2H, and North. Molly the Mule, doubled. She always doubled with an opening bid and at least three cards in the other three suits and she was not going to stop now. RR, East, raised to 3H and ChCh, South, closed the auction with a jump to Four Spades.
SB thought that a heart lead might help the declarer so chose the seven of clubs. RR thought this might be a doubleton, so played AK and another, won by ChCh in dummy. Trumps were drawn in three rounds, West pitching the last club and two hearts, and now ChCh made the very unusual play of cashing both remaining spades ending in dummy before finessing the queen of hearts. This held, and ChCh went into the tank for so long that the round was called with four cards remaining. SB was surprised to see that he was awarded a very bad score on the board, less than 20%. Most NS's had a free run to 4S by North, on the start of three rounds of clubs, and all played the standard good practice of drawing trumps and playing the ace and queen of hearts end-playing whoever had the king of hearts. SB asked ChCh by message why he had not chosen this line, especially in view of his weak 2H.
ChCh replied. "Why should I?" The new Sky Blue Book says: "If there are only at most four tricks remaining, the platform will assign a result based on the double-dummy outcome from the point where play was curtailed."
So, if the heart finesse lost, I would still make the contract by "timing out" the hand. If the heart finesse won, I would make an overtrick by similar means. It was, you might say, "a no-cost practice finesse".
SB was for once lost for words, and his only regret was that he had not spotted the loophole first. He called the TD, who responded that his hands were tied by the Sky-Blue Book, which states: "If there are more than a few tricks to be played, the TD will assign a score based on the auction and play that occurred." When there are four or fewer cards remaining, as is the case here, the software assigns the score, not the TD.
How do you rule?