I had the pleasure of playing in The Poznan Pig's Ear Pairs last night, sponsored by Polish Pork Produce. It was an event for unqualified directors and other invited players, and much of the discussion as we gathered was about RRR - the Riccardi Revoke Ruling. There was a rumour that some of the novitiate from the Catholic Directing Monastery in Warsaw would deliberately revoke to test out the Beijing minute, but they assured me that this was not the case.
On the above hand, South, who bore a remarkable resemblance to the Rueful Rabbit, tried a "gambling 3NT" on the first round - he had seen Cronier try it from the bulletin, and he stood it when it was doubled, by West, who had opened a constructive weak two in spades. RR actually had a club with the king of spades, but noticed it when West led the queen of spades. Unfortunately, he also then replaced the king of spades among his clubs.
West, an Armenian visitor, was surprised when South discarded a small club, especially as his partner showed an even number. Nevertheless he continued with the jack of spades, on which North and South discarded clubs, and then he played the ten of spades, on which North and South threw hearts. West, confident that his partner, who closely resembled the Secretary Bird, would overtake and play one back, continued with the nine of spades. RR threw a diamond from dummy, and was about to throw another club from hand, when he discovered the king of spades, which he originally knew he had, lurking among the clubs. RR was used to calling the TD for his many infractions and did so, but OO, standing in as the chief TD, asked that play continue, and none of the three revokes could be corrected, but on this trick RR could - indeed must - win it with the king of spades.
Somewhat flustered, the Rabbit cashed the ace of diamonds, and was disappointed to note that they broke 4-0 (he had forgotten about his earlier diamond discard from dummy). But he did work out to cross to dummy with the ace of hearts and take the "marked" diamond finesse. He ran all the diamonds, and when East threw all his hearts, RR tried to throw him in with the ten of hearts to lead into the A10 of clubs, only to find that it held the trick, and he made 10 tricks.
Oscar the Owl had the Beijing minute to hand, and could see that the equity before the first revoke was 7 tricks, and that dropped to 6 tricks for trick 2 and 3. As these were subsequent revokes in the same suit, and the offender did not win the trick, and the second and third revokes did not increase the declarer's equity - however one read the Beijing minute - there was no further adjustment, and there was thus only one trick deducted from the 10 that RR had made.
Oscar commented "Unusual hand; it needs 3 revokes, a miscount in diamonds and a Vienna Coup to make 3NT", but SB, East, was unhappy. He cited Law 23 verbatim and argued that RR could have known that revoking three times would rectify the count for the squeeze against himself, and assist in unblocking the diamonds. North, who looked a little like the Hideous Hog, and was on a sponsor's invite, testing out the free sausages, disagreed: "The last time there was a blockage in the toilets downstairs, RR did not notice it, which is part of the reason he gets the sobriquet 'Rueful'", he commented. "And in any case, should not West have cashed the ace of spades at trick 4, on which his partner would know to unblock the king if he had it? To not guard against South revoking three times was an error, and with the Rabbit as South, it would be classed as a SEWOG", he claimed. "And as for the idea that RR could have been aware of anything, that concept is ludicrous."
Oscar, the TD, did not totally agree with this, but was still wondering whether RR "could have been aware" his multiple infractions could benefit him. And whether it was relevant what ability RR had. He thought the purpose of Law 23 was to punish any infraction which the most perspicacious of players could have been aware might benefit them. How would you rule?