Responding to Stayman with 4-4 majors Alerting question
#141
Posted 2012-November-09, 12:57
A footnote states that Stayman originally had 2♠ as the correct answer with such a hand, but that this had been abandoned in Europe.
#142
Posted 2012-November-09, 15:15
pran, on 2012-November-09, 12:57, said:
A footnote states that Stayman originally had 2♠ as the correct answer with such a hand, but that this had been abandoned in Europe.
How can there be a "correct answer" ? This is not mathematics. Players can choose their own methods, which are all valid. A 40-year-old quote about a misnamed convention from 70 years ago in another country is hardly grounds for defining expectations.
#143
Posted 2012-November-10, 00:10
paua, on 2012-November-09, 15:15, said:
"Correct" in the sense that it was how Stayman originally defined his convention, and "correct" in the sense how it was eventually unanimously changed, at least in Europe.
Players may certainly choose their own methods, but they should not use an already well defined name for them.
Ranik Halle sometimes said when he met players who claimed that their 2♣ opening bid was "Halle's" that it really was not; as originator of that convention he felt justified in claiming knowledge of what "Halle's" was and was not.
#144
Posted 2012-November-10, 04:13
For those of us in England, the regulations say that Stayman is to be announced "where it is used in the traditional manner to ask for a four-card major, ie with responses 2♦ with no major, and 2♥ and 2♠ to show that major." Consequently an announcement of "Stayman" is consistent with any of the specific agreements above.
#145
Posted 2012-November-12, 09:56
pran, on 2012-November-10, 00:10, said:
Since Stayman did not invent the convention [Marx in England and Rapee in the USA at a similar time] I am not sure that how Stayman originally defined it matters, and it certainly has not been unanimously changed [ask a couple of my partners].
But if you look at books on conventions, one of the problems with such books is that they tend to tell you how a method is played, when in fact many people play it differently. Similarly with books on systems. The authors find that giving options does not help, and they tend to say their way is the way.
The problem with most conventions is that a majority of people play them one particular way and assume that everyone else plays them that particular way as well. My experience over the years is that people play them in vastly different ways - just ask people who play Aspro, Astro, Asptro, Crowhurst and so forth.
Possibly modern American methods are better standardised because there are certain authorities that people follow, but even so if someone tells me something is a Bergen raise I reckon that covers at least four possibilities. One of my partners suggested we play Bergen, so I told her I would if she explained it to me. After saying things like "Of course you know it, David" and "Everyone plays it" she finally explained it. Certainly not what I would have understood!
Merseyside England UK
EBL TD
Currently at home
Visiting IBLF from time to time
<webjak666@gmail.com>
#146
Posted 2012-November-12, 10:26
bluejak, on 2012-November-12, 09:56, said:
But if you look at books on conventions, one of the problems with such books is that they tend to tell you how a method is played, when in fact many people play it differently. Similarly with books on systems. The authors find that giving options does not help, and they tend to say their way is the way.
The problem with most conventions is that a majority of people play them one particular way and assume that everyone else plays them that particular way as well. My experience over the years is that people play them in vastly different ways - just ask people who play Aspro, Astro, Asptro, Crowhurst and so forth.
Possibly modern American methods are better standardised because there are certain authorities that people follow, but even so if someone tells me something is a Bergen raise I reckon that covers at least four possibilities. One of my partners suggested we play Bergen, so I told her I would if she explained it to me. After saying things like "Of course you know it, David" and "Everyone plays it" she finally explained it. Certainly not what I would have understood!
According to references I have available Stayman did not invent the convention but he was the one who published it.
My statement on the response when opener has both majors is a direct quotation from a Norwegian very reputed book in 1973.
#147
Posted 2012-November-12, 10:37
bluejak, on 2012-November-12, 09:56, said:
I think it does, given that Stayman was Rapee's partner.
One could even argue that Staymans's definition matters even more than Rapee's. After all, if Rapee would use Stayman, it would be Stayman who would be responding. And since this thread is about responses to Stayman, Stayman might know better than Rapee.
Rik
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the new discoveries, is not Eureka! (I found it!), but Thats funny Isaac Asimov
The only reason God did not put "Thou shalt mind thine own business" in the Ten Commandments was that He thought that it was too obvious to need stating. - Kenberg
#148
Posted 2012-November-12, 10:56
Trinidad, on 2012-November-12, 10:37, said:
One could even argue that Staymans's definition matters even more than Rapee's. After all, if Rapee would use Stayman, it would be Stayman who would be responding. And since this thread is about responses to Stayman, Stayman might know better than Rapee.
Rik
If you are able to contact either one of them, please let me know; and ask them whether their views on the subject have changed, and whether the quality of Bridge is as good as I hope it will be where they are.
#149
Posted 2012-November-12, 11:27
bluejak, on 2012-November-12, 09:56, said:
But if you look at books on conventions, one of the problems with such books is that they tend to tell you how a method is played, when in fact many people play it differently. Similarly with books on systems. The authors find that giving options does not help, and they tend to say their way is the way.
The problem with most conventions is that a majority of people play them one particular way and assume that everyone else plays them that particular way as well. My experience over the years is that people play them in vastly different ways - just ask people who play Aspro, Astro, Asptro, Crowhurst and so forth.
Possibly modern American methods are better standardised because there are certain authorities that people follow, but even so if someone tells me something is a Bergen raise I reckon that covers at least four possibilities. One of my partners suggested we play Bergen, so I told her I would if she explained it to me. After saying things like "Of course you know it, David" and "Everyone plays it" she finally explained it. Certainly not what I would have understood!
Stayman was the first to publicize the convention. Presumably what he wrote up is what Rapee defined, since they were partners at the time. OTOH, I agree it probably doesn't matter much.
In the ACBL, at least, whether a call requires an alert on the grounds it is "highly unusual and unexpected" is supposed to be based on "historical usage" (whatever that means) rather than on "nobody around here plays it that way".
I would not say that methods are better standardized in NA than elsewhere. Americans in particular are prone to do things their own way, while claiming what they do is "standard".
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
#150
Posted 2012-November-12, 12:54
blackshoe, on 2012-November-12, 11:27, said:
That explains a lot: London area bridge is becoming more Americanised than the rest of the British Isles,so perhaps the views on standard are too.
Merseyside England UK
EBL TD
Currently at home
Visiting IBLF from time to time
<webjak666@gmail.com>
#151
Posted 2012-November-14, 17:51
JLOGIC, on 2012-November-07, 21:42, said:
Interesting. Perhaps you need to talk to:
lalldonn, on 2012-October-31, 14:19, said:
#152
Posted 2012-November-15, 00:39
Also, since he doesn't play as much as me I will also watch and report back if I ever see anyone bid 2S with 4-4 in the majors. It won't happen.
#153
Posted 2012-November-15, 04:01
Failing that - Josh, I'm looking for opps for later, fancy it?
#155
Posted 2012-November-15, 08:05
JLOGIC, on 2012-November-15, 00:39, said:
Also, since he doesn't play as much as me I will also watch and report back if I ever see anyone bid 2S with 4-4 in the majors. It won't happen.
Don't play against me then.
Merseyside England UK
EBL TD
Currently at home
Visiting IBLF from time to time
<webjak666@gmail.com>
#156
Posted 2012-November-16, 07:37
#157
Posted 2012-November-19, 13:44
Fluffy, on 2012-November-16, 07:37, said:
...hardly surprising given that this is part of Standard French.
-- Bertrand Russell
#158
Posted 2012-November-19, 13:45
paua, on 2012-November-04, 13:21, said:
Easy enough to say but it gets quite hideous if you try to write it down properly, see http://www.bridgebas...rtificial-call/
-- Bertrand Russell
#159
Posted 2012-November-19, 19:32
mgoetze, on 2012-November-19, 13:45, said:
I think the definition of "artificial" is far simpler and less ambiguous than the current situation where we alert an "unexpected" call. This requires mind-reading.
#160
Posted 2012-November-20, 03:31
paua, on 2012-November-19, 19:32, said:
Which definition? The WBF one? Did you read the thread I linked to at all?
-- Bertrand Russell