FrancesHinden, on 2014-June-17, 15:37, said:
Nope, can't find any EBU guidelines that says you shouldn't ask all the time in this kind of situation When my partner opens 1NT and the next hand overcalls, alerted, I always ask unless I already know the meaning from their convention card. What the EBU don't like is saying that you always ask about every single alerted bid. Because, in practice, people don't even if they say they do. That's completely different from 'always asking' in the middle of a live competitive auction. In some circumstances it passes enormous UI not to ask (e.g. 1C 1H 1S (alerted). If you double 1S, that's takeout of spades/snapdragon. If you ask about 1S and discover it denies 4 spades and double, that shows spades.)
EBU Blue Book 2E1 said:
A player has the right to ask questions at his turn to call or play, but exercising this right may have consequences. If a player shows unusual interest in one or more calls of the auction, then this may give rise to unauthorised information. His partner must avoid taking advantage. It may be in a player's interests to defer questions until either he is about to make the opening lead or his partner's lead is face-down on the table.