Fundamental alert question.
#1
Posted 2007-April-08, 06:13
Let's now suppose the auction comes up for your opponents and is not alerted. Do you now stubbornly assume it is X, even though you know it is Y? If you do and you get a bad result since your opponent held Y all along, should you get a score correction?
#2
Posted 2007-April-08, 06:31
Suppose someone opens 2♣ at a local club somewhere in the Netherlands, and it's not alerted. And they don't have a CC. In principle you could assume that it's a natural call and therefore you could overcall 3♣ as showing the majors, or double to show support for ♠♥♦. My suspecion is that most TDs would say that it was your own responsibility to ask some neutral question, e.g. just by pointing at the 2♣ bidding card and showing a question-mark-shaped face. That would be rather harmless and besides, even if you could assume that 2♣ were natural it would still be natural to ask what strength it shows.
On the other hand, suppose someone forgets to alert one of the many transfer bids after 1NT that are alertable, e.g. 2♠ as transfer to clubs (or whatever). Actually there are a few pairs who play 2♠ as natural, and by asking you may draw attention to your own spade holding. So you must assume that it's natural and if that damages you, the director should adjust. Opps may get upset at you and at the director, but they will have learned to alert correctly or at least to try to alert correctly.
Playing on BBO, I think it's your responsibility to ask for the meaning of a non-alerted call that is unlikely to be natural, such as a 2♣ response to 1NT (assuming that the rules of the tourney say "alert all artificial calls").
#3
Posted 2007-April-08, 06:40
Quote
Suppose someone opens 2♣ at a local club somewhere in the Netherlands, and it's not alerted. And they don't have a CC. In principle you could assume that it's a natural call and therefore you could overcall 3♣ as showing the majors, or double to show support for ♠♥♦. My suspecion is that most TDs would say that it was your own responsibility to ask some neutral question, e.g. just by pointing at the 2♣ bidding card and showing a question-mark-shaped face. That would be rather harmless and besides, even if you could assume that 2♣ were natural it would still be natural to ask what strength it shows.
This is exactly the situation I am asking about. If nothing happens to you if it's not alerted, is it in fact still alertable? I know the rules say it is but the practice says it's not!
#4
Posted 2007-April-08, 08:03
Psyche (pron. sahy-kee): The human soul, spirit or mind (derived, personification thereof, beloved of Eros, Greek myth).
Masterminding (pron. m
s
t
r-m
nd
ing) tr. v. - Any bid made by bridge player with which partner disagrees."Gentlemen, when the barrage lifts." 9th battalion, King's own Yorkshire light infantry,
2000 years earlier: "morituri te salutant"
"I will be with you, whatever". Blair to Bush, precursor to invasion of Iraq
#5
Posted 2007-April-08, 09:03
#6
Posted 2007-April-08, 11:02
If the NO are more experienced than the offenders, then it may be right not to give adjustments.
Arend
#7
Posted 2007-April-08, 12:19
Gerben42, on Apr 8 2007, 05:13 AM, said:
Let's now suppose the auction comes up for your opponents and is not alerted. Do you now stubbornly assume it is X, even though you know it is Y? If you do and you get a bad result since your opponent held Y all along, should you get a score correction?
No I dont think you should get a correction.
Quote
Havent you failed to play bridge, to protect yourself?
"100% certain that many excellent players would disagree. This is far more about style/judgment than right vs. wrong." Fred
"Hysterical Raisins again - this time on the World stage, not just the ACBL" mycroft
#8
Posted 2007-April-08, 14:06
Gerben42, on Apr 8 2007, 02:13 PM, said:
Let's now suppose the auction comes up for your opponents and is not alerted. Do you now stubbornly assume it is X, even though you know it is Y? If you do and you get a bad result since your opponent held Y all along, should you get a score correction?
The problem is of course that you never can know for sure it's Y, unless you play against someone you're intimate familiar with regarding methods.
For others, even if they used to play Y, they might have changed to X. And without the alert you cannot know this with certainty.
If this is a common situation, where most people play the alertable Y without alerting it, you've got two possibilities. Either ask and get clarification, or assume it's X (as it should be, lacking the alert), and get an adjustment if it turns out to be Y and you're damaged.
If you ask and it turns out to be Y, point out to opps that this is alertable.
Harald
#9
Posted 2007-April-08, 14:16
I believe that the appropriate way to proceed is to
1. Make sure that you and your partner have an agreement in place to handle this eventuality
2. Stubbornly assume that the non-alerted bid shows X
3. If you and your partner are damaged by misinformation, seek redress from the TD
4. If the TD refuses to enforce the rules, escalate the matter
#10
Posted 2007-April-08, 14:25
Personally I don't like this approach, since it seems to indicate that certain alertable bids are not (de facto) alertable, and that it would also be to one's advantage to consistently fail to alert such bids. But those are the "rules on the ground" around here. Hopefully things are different in other countries.
On the other hand, it's very amusing to me when my RHO opens 1NT and I overcall a natural 2♦ (no alert) and opponents proceed to interrogate my partner about the meaning of the bid (of course they have to do this to some degree, since they wouldn't be protected if 2♦ was majors or one major and partner failed to alert).
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#11
Posted 2007-April-08, 14:41
Quote
Nope... Exactly the same, which is the reason for the question in the first place.
As someone who does not play transfers after 1NT with his regular partners, I wonder what would happen in this case in the US.
#12
Posted 2007-April-08, 15:02
Everybody else will think about the cards that made you ask.
Lets assume:
1NT - pass - 2♥ - You ask ... pass
2♠ - 3♥ DIRECTOR!
or
1NT - pass - 2♥ - You hold long spades, but you guess it's transfer and PASS
pass - pass
You just lost a good 2♠ contract and opps did everything right. No way you get your score back.
The only way to solve that problem, is to enforce the proper alerts. This you should have protected yourself by asking is just stupid. Unless you ask every single bid you create an UI.
So whenever opps forget to alert the non offending side is in a lose-lose situation. There is definitely something wrong with the laws there.
#13
Posted 2007-April-08, 15:30
"100% certain that many excellent players would disagree. This is far more about style/judgment than right vs. wrong." Fred
"Hysterical Raisins again - this time on the World stage, not just the ACBL" mycroft
#14
Posted 2007-April-11, 21:12
In the early 90's ACBL still required alerts for negative doubles and no alerts for penalty doubles in these auctions, but practically all tournament players used negX. But my bridge crowd still used penalty doubles in our rubber bridge games, and when I would go to tournaments with some of these people we would agree to play our minimal RB system (IIRC, it was 5-card majors, Stayman, regular Blackwood, takeout doubles, and weak 2's). Every time we had a 1X-(1Y)-Dbl auction the opponents would stare at us, waiting for the expected double. These moments were priceless.
#15
Posted 2007-April-12, 03:10
There is little case law on this subject (particularly as the alerting rules have recently changed). Under the old rules I would not have given you, Gerben, an adjustment in the following case:
(1C) 1H (x) Dbl not alerted but in fact meant to be for take-out, you say you didn't raise hearts because you "assumed the double must be for penalties" (the rules have changed and now take-out doubles are not alerted).
Similarly under the new rules, 1NT p 2C not alerted/announced, if you assume it's a natural weak take-out and then claim misinformation I would rule against you.
But the examples have to be fairly extreme to override the principle. You would be entitled to assume that a 2D overcall of a 1NT opening is natural without an alert, or that a 2major response to 1NT not alerted/announced is natural.
(In England no-one understands the new rules on doubles and you pretty much have to ask everytime if you are unsure)
#16
Posted 2007-April-12, 09:08
Gerben42, on Apr 8 2007, 07:13 AM, said:
Let's now suppose the auction comes up for your opponents and is not alerted. Do you now stubbornly assume it is X, even though you know it is Y? If you do and you get a bad result since your opponent held Y all along, should you get a score correction?
Hi,
simple example (Germany)
1 NT (1) - 2H (2)
(1) 15-17
(2a) natural (and weak sign off) => unusual, but not alertable
(2b) transfer => usual, but alertable
First off all you need to construct a hand,
where you get damaged, assume (2a),
you are "suprised" it goes all pass, and
you did not act holding a takeout for hearts,
your fault.
Assuming it was transfer, the auction comes
back, you can act again and claim damage
...
Similar scenarios exists for weak2 and strong2
Second it depends a lot on the level you are playing,
playing a certain level, opponents need to know the
alerting rules, and they have to follow the rules.
With kind regards
Marlowe
PS: You have the duty to look after yourself in a
reasonable way, i.e. look at the convention card if
possible, but nothing else.
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#17
Posted 2007-May-04, 14:39
One of the dumber concepts promoted by the ACBL is that I should only ask if there's something for me to think about. I always ask *if I would ask if I had something to think about*. I have yet to have a director lecture me on this, and certainly in that way I am passing no UI.
#18
Posted 2007-May-07, 04:42
* I already know
* I think opps may not know
Ceterum censeo... the current rules are bad, in the sense that:
You should not be forced to "protect yourself". Instead, alert rules should be set up that bids that are standard but alertable should be announced.
In case of doubles, nothing in the spectrum of TO through penalty should be either announcable or alertable.

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