blackshoe, on 2012-November-01, 19:22, said:
Four options are given to the director. None of them is "cancel the board".
Law 16C2D: 'award an artificial adjusted score' means cancel the board.
Vampyr, on 2012-November-01, 17:39, said:
Well, if it is a two-winner game then of course you cannot arrow-switch. Perhaps previous posters thought that went without saying.
I thought I made it clear in my answer that two-winner did not affect it. You can still arrow-switch.
blackshoe, on 2012-November-01, 20:10, said:
Well, we could argue about "valid", but never mind that.
If arrow-switching is always best, why are the other options in the law?
Simple: because arrow-switching is not always best.
Redealing is a reasonable option when a board is being played for the first time at teams or pairs, though of course hand records affect this.
In a club when someone has seen a two I usually let them play it as is.
If two players have seen the queen then arrow-switching cannot help. Now you have to redeal: if not possible, let them play it if you think it hardly matters: if not possible, scrap the board.
There are four options for different situations.
aguahombre, on 2012-November-01, 20:30, said:
Doesn't arrow-switching such as this in a straight Mitchell movement create a variable where the pairs are not playing this hand against the other pairs with which they will be compared at the end of the session?
Obviously. And if this was the final of the top World competition we might worry about it. But why on earth are we worrying in a club? You get a valid result on the board.
Oh, it's not perfect? Well, of course not: perfect unsullied results are only obtained at tables where there is no infraction. When an infraction occurs we follow the Laws plus commonsense. People like playing boards: do not cancel a board in a club unless there is a time problem or there is no viable alternative.