Given this seems to be an area of some controversy in rulings, I'd like suggestions on how I should approach rulings regarding break in tempo. In particular, the things that need to be considered and what to do once I have that information. Please keep in mind the following information:
- This is in a club game, so we're not playing for high stakes.
- I am a new director and not exactly a veteran of bridge in general.
- When directing, I am usually a playing director. On this night, there were no other directors available (the other one was at the table!)
- My opponents are excellent veteran players, among the best at the club.
I'll illustrate this with an example, at which I was playing - which of course made it more challenging.
I was sitting West, with ♠ 10xxxx ♥ x ♦ - ♣ KJxxxxx. North opens the bidding at it goes:
(1♦) - P - (1♥) - P - (2♥) - P* - (P) - X - (P) - 2NT (asking for a minor) - (3♥) - 4♣ - (4♥) - P - P - P.
4♥ goes down 2 tricks, 5♣ makes.
The * bid is the issue at stake. The opposition at the end mentioned that my partner hesitated and hence ethically I should have passed 2♥. I didn't notice the hesitation, as my partner is quite methodical. If he paused, I didn't notice it and I generally try to pre-plan my bids to avoid situations like this. In our agreements, an auction like this (without his pause) means the basic requirements for me to bid are 13 cards and a heartbeat! So I had already predetermined if my opponent passed 2♥ I was always going to bid something.
So in essence given the above situation:
- What should happen if the hesitation is not agreed on? My partner didn't think he hesitated either.
- Was I right in saying when asked to decide that I'd look at the score later to see if anything unusual happened here and I would consider adjusting it if our result was unusual? (As an aside, they didn't pursue it because they got a good score).
- What things should I be trying to determine in order to decide whether the score needed to be corrected later?
- Given my partner and I had an agreement (non-written), is it proper for me to bid (as distinct from the suggestion I should have passed)? Is there no logical alternative given we do have an agreement on this, and hence bidding is "required"?
- Would bidding on to 4♥ with a hand passed in at 2♥ be considered reckless or irrational? I can accept the 3♥ bid as simply competing but the 4♥ bid seems to be having a bet both ways! But his bridge judgment is probably a lot more experienced than mine.
- Is there anything else to consider from this?
Any advice would be helpful. I'm mainly asking in order to learn, nothing more.
Thanks,
Ian
P.S For bonus points, you can tell me how to bid that hand. I'm still not sure what the right thing to do is!