Vampyr, on 2012-November-08, 08:15, said:
Do you know any of these players personally, or are you just speculating?
Yes, I do - for example, the first person I happened to ask at the club last night. He said "I've played it that way for 30 years", which is exactly the sort of circumstance in which this happens. I asked a few others - a totally unscientific but not specially-selected sample - and there were another newly-formed pair who had decided to play 2
♥ together but who had both played 2
♠ in their previous partnerships, and 3 other pairs playing 2
♥. One said 2NT, and one 2
♦ (I'm sure this pair would
announce 2
♣ as "Extended Stayman" and I would expect them to alert the response).
This was a competition night at at club that has considerably more player sessions each year than Young Chelsea. I'm sure that if I were selective, I could find more 2
♠ bidders by focusing on those whose methods haven't changed for years. I suspect - speculating - that I could find even more at some other clubs I occasionally play at. And it wouldn't occur to any of these people to alert it as "highly unexpected".
By the way, to add to the commonly-read but older books I cited earlier, Iain Macleod's
Bridge Is An Easy Game also says to bid 2
♠ with both. And it might interest you that even last year's new (7th) edition of
The Official Encyclopedia of Bridge still includes the remark "The authorities are divided on the correct rebid for the opener holding both majors", though it qualifies this with "In this treatment, opener must bid 2
♥ with both majors" when discussing what it labels as the "weak / modern" treatment of the 2major response, which you would presumably regard as universal practice now.
I'm with you in reckoning that 2
♥ would be nearly universal in what you might label the modern game, but there are plenty of clubs and people out there where it just isn't. The EBU alerting rules apply just as much in those parts as they do elsewhere, and what you would label "experienced" players are perhaps 10-20% of EBU's total active membership. Those players are also more likely to be attuned to the alert rules, and to be more active alerters. Yes, if I'd played 2
♠ against you in the Autumn Congress without alerts, I'd understand it if you got upset through relying on what proved to be an unwarranted assumption - I might even take your side. But don't expect that to apply in much of the club bridge in this country, and don't expect "that's what experienced players would do" to cut much ice.