A further experiment is also discussed in Tversky and Kahneman (1983) in which 93 subjects rated the probability that Bjorn Borg, a strong tennis player, would in the Wimbledon finals “win the match”, “lose the first set”, “lose the first set but win the match”, and “win the first set but lose the match”. The conjunction fallacy was expressed: “lose the first set but win the match” was ranked more probable than”lose the first set”. Subjects were also asked to verify whether various strings of wins and losses would count as an extensional example of each case, and indeed, subjects were interpreting the cases as conjuncts which were satisfied iff both constituents were satisfied, and not interpreting them as material implications, conditional statements, or disjunctions; also, constituent B was not interpreted to exclude constituent A. The genius of this experiment was that researchers could directly test what subjects thought was the meaning of each proposition, ruling out a very large class of misunderstandings.
Looks like it has been addressed in Conjunction Controversy (Or, How They Nail It Down):