blackshoe, on Dec 8 2009, 03:53 PM, said:
I take your point about setting a precedent, Helene, but as Gordon said, here we have a player who has extraneous information about board ten. Are we to simply to give an artificial adjusted score on this board, and hope that anyone else who recognizes the problem calls the TD so he can get the same, or do we let them play on, with that extraneous knowledge?
As it turned out, the complete deal (including the two hands he couldn't see) were identical down to the last pip.
I think as a TD, I would just assume the much more likely case namely that the two deals were just very similar (maybe down to two or three pips) and that it was just a coincidence so that the two hands he couldn't see might be completely different.
And then tell the player to play on and say he could use information from the previous deal if he wanted, if he really thought the other two hands were also identical, which I would not know. (For all we know the software bug might have produced two deals that were identical w.r.t. two hands but not w.r.t. the other two).
I would then be proved wrong afterwards, and would be torn between canceling the board, or assigning a splitscore so that this player's opponents were not damaged, or whatever.
But I think in most such cases I would be right.
The world would be such a happy place, if only everyone played Acol :) --- TramTicket