Multiple Teams; Opening lead ♣6; Table Result 3NTxx+3 NS+2200.
The North London club had a post-covid trial of live play this week and all went reasonably smoothly until this board. Colin the Corgi, West, one of the club's brightest but most impetuous young stars, partnered Charlie the Chimp, East. ChCh was pretty confident that CC would work out that he wanted a club lead, as he had not opened a weak two, but to make assurance double sure, as the bard said, he took the full ten seconds allowed before doubling. Just as SB was beginning to regret his aggressive jump to game, probably inexcusable with the rabbit, CC led the six of clubs. "DIRECTOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOR" bellowed SB, North, and Oscar the Owl came running. "How can I help?" OO, asked patiently.
"Opening lead by West during the auction," SB began. "My final pass had not left the bidding box". "No real problem," replied OO, although he almost guessed what was going to happen. SB now redoubled. "OK, that means that your partner is silenced, CC, and if you become a defender there will be further penalties; and the fact that SB originally selected pass is UI to RR". Everyone passed, and now SB did OO's job for him.
"This is an interesting one, and the laws are pretty sloppy on a card led during the auction", began SB.
A card prematurely exposed (but not led, see Law 57) by a defender is a penalty card unless the Director designates otherwise (see Law 49 and Law 72C may apply).
"I think that you will find Law 57 applies, for a card prematurely led; indeed Law 50 tells the TD to go to law 57 in such cases:
A. Premature Play or Lead to Next Trick
When a defender leads to the next trick before his partner has played to the current trick, or plays out of turn before his partner has played, the card so led or played becomes a major penalty card, and declarer selects one of the following options. He may:
1. require offender’s partner to play the highest card he holds of the suit led, or
2. require offender’s partner to play the lowest card he holds of the suit led, or
3. require offender’s partner to play a card of another suit specified by declarer, or
4. forbid offender’s partner to play a card of another suit specified by declarer."
SB paused for breath and a glass of water, and stopped to use the hand sanitiser after his Gettysburg-style address
"I have told you many times not to make rulings for me, SB, and you will be fined 3 IMPs for this one." responded OO, "but you are right." He continued, facing RR, "Which of the four options will you choose, RR, and you can't get ChCh to revoke?".
"I guess I will ask him to play his lowest club," responded RR, "but I don't think it is going to matter, "This looks a dreadful contract". ""Why did you redouble with only 7 points, SB?"
ChCh, East, had to contribute the five of clubs, and RR won surprisingly with the seven. Now he took the diamond finesse, West playing nine, which was intended as a Smith Peter to show three clubs but ChCh thought was normal count. East ducked the first diamond and RR returned to hand with a spade, and wondered whether to repeat the diamond finesse but decided against it and ludicrously dropped East's king. West was forced to unguard spades in the ending to avoid the strip squeeze and RR emerged with 12 unexpected tricks for 3NTxx+3.
"You should know that score, it is 2200, RR" goaded SB, "a score you conceded when you left in my SOS redouble last week." "And it cannot make if CC leads the eight of clubs prematurely. The moral is that you should lead top of nothing if you are leading during the auction", he chortled.
"Is that ruling right, OO?" asked ChCh, "when North reached for the pass card, the auction had effectively ended. "I think technically it had not until it left the bidding box," responded OO, "there is UI from the change of call from Pass to Redouble, but I don't think RR used that, or any other I for that matter." He ended: "I think if North had then passed, I would have ruled that there was no penalty, as "precedent" is that the final pass is often not completed properly. But when SB redoubled, the auction was clearly live."
Do you agree with the ruling?