- 2N - 3♣ Opener has 20-22 HCP 4333, 4432 or 5332. Responder relayed (Puppet Stayman).
- 3♦ - 3♥: Opener has no five-card major. He denies precisely two spades and three hearts. Responder promises four spades and may have four hearts..
- 3N. Opener's rebid is natural, denying three or more spades.
Bridge Logic Disclosure (anywhere)
#1
Posted 2011-March-15, 10:54
#2
Posted 2011-March-15, 11:19
#3
Posted 2011-March-15, 11:21
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#5
Posted 2011-March-15, 12:54
Led to my favorite committee of all time when a 2♥ opener was alerted as "could be this, could be that, could be something else". Repeated a few times on further inquiry. The opp then bid 3nt wide open in hearts and made it.
When asked in committee why he bid it, he said "Anyone that doesn't have the courtesy to give a proper explanation, doesn't have the courtesy to lead their partners suit". Case closed.
How hard is any opponent supposed to work to figure out your non-mainstream bidding? At the least, it just unfairly wears you out. Just my opinion of course.
What is baby oil made of?
#6
Posted 2011-March-15, 13:13
nige1, on 2011-March-15, 10:54, said:
- 3N. Opener's rebid is natural, denying three or more spades.
This does not seem like full disclosure to me. When you play methods that are not mainstream then I believe the onus is on the protagonists to provide a full description, particularly at the end of an auction whether there is no danger of passing UI. I would take an extremely dim view if I thought a player was deliberately trying to mislead another through such antics when it is so easy to provide a clear explanation.
I don't regard this as similar to the Icelandic thread.
#7
Posted 2011-March-15, 14:48
campboy, on 2011-March-15, 11:19, said:
OK, but I'd rather be told than have to work it out myself.
#8
Posted 2011-March-15, 15:59
In practice, I think that summarising what you have shown is normally better practice than describing every bid, particularly if your opponents are club level players.
#10
Posted 2011-March-15, 16:12
1s-2d
2s-3s
4d-4s
The opponents ask about the meaning of 4D only. Your agreements are that 4d is a first or second round control, but if they ask about only 4d are you really suppose to volunteer the information that this denies a club control? Suppose you are an unreconstructed LOL, so you would have played 4c = gerber on this auction. Should you now volunteer this information when asked about the meaning of 4d? What about the information that you also play serious 3N so 4d limited your hand. What about the information that you play 2S= 10-14 with a 6 card suit, and that 2S always promises 6 cards so that 4d is now a non serious slam try denying a club control in the context of a hand with 6 spades that was too good to open 2S initially. At what point do you give up? I think that if the opponents ask about a specific bid it is implied that they have followed the rest of the auction, and you are entitled to give only the precise meaning, expecting the opposition to understand from the context. If they ask something open ended like "please explain what declarer has shown" then you should be scrupulous about giving full disclosure, but summarise it. Do not include useless information on hands that partner might have held but turned out not to.
#11
Posted 2011-March-15, 17:11
phil_20686, on 2011-March-15, 15:59, said:
Not in ACBL jurisdiction, I think. The ACBL Alert Procedures says that opponents don't have to ask the right questions. Any request for information should prompt a complete explanation.
For example, if you alert a bid, and the opponent asks "Was that convention name?", it's not appropriate to simply answer "yes" or "no". You should give the same answer as if they'd simply said "Please explain."
#12
Posted 2011-March-15, 19:05
campboy, on 2011-March-15, 11:19, said:
Of course it is logical. It is also MI, and with better players playing weaker ones quite possibly deliberate MI. It is not making your agreements "fully and freely available", but making them fuzzily available through obfuscation.
phil_20686, on 2011-March-15, 16:12, said:
Yes, of course, because that is part of the agreed meaning.
Merseyside England UK
EBL TD
Currently at home
Visiting IBLF from time to time
<webjak666@gmail.com>
#13
Posted 2011-March-15, 19:20
phil_20686, on 2011-March-15, 15:59, said:
#14
Posted 2011-March-15, 19:25
barmar, on 2011-March-15, 17:11, said:
#15
Posted 2011-March-16, 03:02
barmar, on 2011-March-15, 17:11, said:
For example, if you alert a bid, and the opponent asks "Was that convention name?", it's not appropriate to simply answer "yes" or "no". You should give the same answer as if they'd simply said "Please explain."
The problem here is that the explanation was complete just not in the form "partner has four hearts".
Its not clear to me that the laws (or regulations) require an answer to be in a specific form. Nor is it clear to me that I must provide lessons in logic to my opponents.
Nevertheless my explanations should not be designed to deliberately mislead. Otherwise succinct and clear should be ok and I don't have an issue with requiring the opponents to process the information provided.
I believe that the USA currently hold only the World Championship For People Who Still Bid Like Your Auntie Gladys - dburn
dunno how to play 4 card majors - JLOGIC
True but I know Standard American and what better reason could I have for playing Precision? - Hideous Hog
Bidding is an estimation of probabilities SJ Simon
#16
Posted 2011-March-16, 03:06
#17
Posted 2011-March-16, 03:59
iviehoff, on 2011-March-16, 03:06, said:
I expect that the full explanation of the 3♦ response is 'denies two (or fewer) spades and three (or fewer) hearts' when Nigel expands his 2NT opener to include such distributions.
#19
Posted 2011-March-16, 04:45
3NT I would explain as two spades, four hearts. Yeah opps can figure that out but they might not have paid attention to the explanation of the 3♦ bid.
#20
Posted 2011-March-16, 10:21
barmar, on 2011-March-15, 17:11, said:
For example, if you alert a bid, and the opponent asks "Was that convention name?", it's not appropriate to simply answer "yes" or "no". You should give the same answer as if they'd simply said "Please explain."
nige1, on 2011-March-15, 19:25, said:
Not everyone agrees. The EBU L&EC considered a regulation of this sort and decided not some time back: it was the view of some members that players that ask specific questions should get the specific answer asked for. For example, if someone asks "Is that weak" then, if it is weak, the answer "Yes" suffices even if there is something else.
Part of the reason for this is that some members felt that questioners deserved such an answer for such a question even if "Please explain" would have got a more helpful answer. Also, a person who literally only wants the answer to the question asked should not be subjected to what he considers irrelevancies.
Merseyside England UK
EBL TD
Currently at home
Visiting IBLF from time to time
<webjak666@gmail.com>