I was North Our opponents made 10 tricks (the Deep Finesse result). At other tables, results ranged from 7 t0 12 tricks. I talked with several directors. All agreed with the table-director. I'm still unconvinced. FWIW. my comments are:
- When I play Precision, partner sometimes opens 1♦ and rebids 2♣. I alert both bids. I explain the 2♣ bid as natural, at least 5-4, but clubs can be longer than diamonds. Careless talk costs lives! Am I divulging too much?
- In the auction on the board above, I would expect the first suit to be longer than the second. However, the director agreed with our opponents that, in Acol, either suit could be longer. I'm told that this is GBK. I've played Acol a long time but, as so often in the past, this GBK is a revelation to me. (unless playing transfers or 2-way check-back or other alertable convention)
- I feel that the current concept of GBK handicaps naive players like me. For us, this auction shows spades longer than or as long as diamonds. For us this is standard. Nevertheless, if asked about our auction, we would divulge our understanding. Failure to disclose understandings, even when opponents try to protect themselves, means that one side profits from agreements unknown to the other. This seems against the spirit and letter of the law.
- Finally, if directors won't allow appeals, then the trend in such rulings, right or wrong, can't be publicised or tested