Behaviour on the table
#1
Posted 2011-August-22, 02:40
You sit at a table, unknown p, read his card as sayc, tell him that this is ok, play starts
Bidding goes
1♥ - 4♣ (alerted as splinter, this IS std in sayc, or?)
and p starts to ask, "cue bid ?"
How should I behave? Is there a standard behaviour page some where?
Different in tournaments/bridge club?
This is not a question when playing with a std. tournament p, as we would have a full convention card in this scenario, only what to do on a random table
(similar question was 1NT - 2♥ Transfer?)
#2
Posted 2011-August-22, 02:48
My experience is that playing at a casual online bridge table it is actually okay to ask this kind of questions the first time the problem arrives. If I were to play for fun against unknown opp's I would not mind if they got theese issues cleared.
Ofcourse it is a different matter if I were playing a tournament.
www.bridgetime.org
#3
Posted 2011-August-22, 03:21
- beginner
- doesnt know SAYC (though mentioned)
- making fun
- you can think of more reasons
At a tournament - IMO - you should not answer. At a "normal" table you may want to explain, but still you feel bothered to explain standard sequences on a - IMO - basic level. In this case it might be one option to play a couple of hands more and then then leave politely the table.
I think there is no established "code of conduct". It depends on you, and on the other people at the table. At a random table you can always have this kind of problem.
#4
Posted 2011-August-22, 03:27
"o: may I explain this to p?"
and then after a yes/no act accordingly, o were allready informed
or is this allready an UI to p?
#5
Posted 2011-August-22, 03:40
#6
Posted 2011-August-22, 03:54
#7
Posted 2011-August-22, 06:47
farrnbach, on 2011-August-22, 02:40, said:
BBO's library of stock convention cards includes these three:
ACBL SAYC
SAYC - Standard American Yellow Card
SAYC
The last of these includes splinters, the first two do not. So, it is not clear whether splinters are on in your scenario. It would, of course, be helpful if BBO would give another name ("BBO SAYC"?) to the third one, so it would be easier for partners to quickly agree on which they were using.
Porreankel, on 2011-August-22, 02:48, said:
My MBC experience is the same.
#8
Posted 2011-August-22, 09:08
if they don't think so they won't and your p has a guess.
but opps may not think that it is up to them to decide in that way. so it is better to discuss at the beginning if we can all agree that it is ok to discuss system details during the hand.
as others have said, in a tournament or team match it is clearly a no-no
#9
Posted 2011-August-24, 08:11
farrnbach, on 2011-August-22, 02:40, said:
You sit at a table, unknown p, read his card as sayc, tell him that this is ok, play starts
This was discussed elsewhere although and it was generally agreed that most people who say SAYC just mean 5-card majors and strong NT.
I'm sure I read somewhere in the FAQs of help section that we should self alert when it is not clear what a bid is. Personally I wouldn't even try a splinter unless the profile says so or they are A/E with lots of logins because, as I have found to my cost, even self alerting doesn't guarantee partner will understand.
#10
Posted 2011-August-24, 10:39
farrnbach, on 2011-August-22, 03:27, said:
"o: may I explain this to p?"
and then after a yes/no act accordingly, o were allready informed
or is this allready an UI to p?
You can ask opponents in private " may i explain him..?" If they say yes, you do, if they say no u remain silent. This way your partner will not see the convo between u and them, thus no UI.
"It's only when a mosquito lands on your testicles that you realize there is always a way to solve problems without using violence!"
"Well to be perfectly honest, in my humble opinion, of course without offending anyone who thinks differently from my point of view, but also by looking into this matter in a different perspective and without being condemning of one's view's and by trying to make it objectified, and by considering each and every one's valid opinion, I honestly believe that I completely forgot what I was going to say."