dburn, on 2015-January-29, 15:44, said:
North deals and West opens 1♠ out of turn. You, the Director, are summoned to the table. What do you do?
dburn, on 2015-January-30, 08:08, said:
Oh, I don't have a problem with North's being to the left of West. What I do have a problem with is this:
If I am North, I know that if I don't accept West's bid East is silenced for the duration. But if someone else is North, he may not know that. Is it part of standard operating procedure to tell him before he selects his option? If not, why not?
RMB1, on 2015-January-30, 09:50, said:
Yes, it is what we except expect of club TDs.
TDs (at all levels) can hope that infractions are accepted because it is easy to rule. But we teach TDs that they must explain the consequences (for the offenders) if the non-offender does not accept, before giving the non-offender the option of accepting. When assessed, trainee TDs will be marked down if they give the option to accept without elaboration.
I am pleased to see Robin's (typo corrected) response to how TDs are advised to handle this particular situation. Indeed this is how I was taught many years ago.
Now compare to the following situation:
South deals and opens 2
♦. West (who rarely uses the 'stop' card) bids 2
♣, which the TD ascertains
not to have been an unintended call. West is invited to a private discussion with the TD and then North has the opportunity to accept, or not accept, the insufficient bid. To make a proper assessment, North might well want to know whether, if he rejects the insufficient bid, West has any call available to him that can be made without silencing East [under Law 27B1(a) and/or Law 27B1(b)]
To repeat David's question in this second situation:
"Is it part of standard operating procedure to tell him before he selects his option? If not, why not?"