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This week I get an email from a fellow club director about the following:
There were questions about "what is actually their agreement", "did South DTRT", "what does North play 2♦-X-2♥ as when it's a weak 2" and all the rest, which aren't relevant (I think) to the question I want to ask.
It was determined that the agreement on 2♦ was "weak 2", and that raising or passing 2♥ wasn't a LA with the opener's hand.
The question is, is passing 3♦ with that 25 - so bad that it rises to "gambling action, which if unsuccessful might have hoped to recover [via the director]"? Is it "an extremely serious error" (probably yes, for almost anyone, but) "unrelated to the infraction" (surely, if told it's a weak 2, everyone would double and double again, even if they thought 3♦ wouldn't be passed in the Flannery auction)?
I believe (as I said above) for certain classes of people, I would rule that. But how far up the skill level (and what skill levels) do you have to go to get there?
One thing I find interesting with this is that in D18, one would expect about half the field to be playing Flannery. In (at least the Mexican part of) D16, nobody plays Flannery (and vice versa for Bergen raises). For me, living in Flannery world for "ever", 2♦-2♥; 3♦, with or without the double, is an "unpossible auction" (partner said where we're playing, partner's captain), and basically screams "I have a weak 2". But that's logic that I wouldn't expect someone even at my skill level [who wasn't a TD, at least] to work out "at the table" facing this weird agreement they run into once a year. Am I wrong there?
But the player wasn't "at my level". How far down the experience chain do you go before, even being comfortable playing in a Flannery world, you wouldn't expect the player to recognize it to the point of "gambling" that it's forcing, and if not, the director will save me?
Does it matter to any of this if the passer themself plays Flannery?
Note, we're no longer explicitly in a "experts need to protect themselves" world, but I think the level in the ACBL still is "failure to play bridge, *for a player of their level*" (my emphasis).
I don't have answers - I have opinions (some of which I've written here). I'm interested in others'.