EBU - unexpected meaning
#1
Posted 2015-August-06, 03:07
1♣ (1♠) 3♣
Where 3♣ is a weakish raise do you alert the 3 ♣ bid?
In particular does your answer change if it is bid at a club compared to at a tournement (where it is rather less unexpected one might feel).
#2
Posted 2015-August-06, 03:16
#3
Posted 2015-August-06, 03:23
TMorris, on 2015-August-06, 03:07, said:
1♣ (1♠) 3♣
Where 3♣ is a weakish raise do you alert the 3 ♣ bid?
FWIW - In Norway clearly yes unless the call has already been declared as forcing, limit raise or pre-emptive. (respectively!)
We must alert: "Natural calls where there can be reasonable doubt about the demand-level".
#4
Posted 2015-August-06, 03:46
TMorris, on 2015-August-06, 03:07, said:
1♣ (1♠) 3♣
Where 3♣ is a weakish raise do you alert the 3 ♣ bid?
In particular does your answer change if it is bid at a club compared to at a tournement (where it is rather less unexpected one might feel).
It used to be the case that
1♣ (pass) 3♣ was alertable
1♣ (1♠) 3♣ was alertable
1♣ (x) 3♣ was not alertable
if 3♣ was weak.
Has that changed?
#5
Posted 2015-August-06, 03:51
StevenG, on 2015-August-06, 03:46, said:
1♣ (pass) 3♣ was alertable
1♣ (1♠) 3♣ was alertable
1♣ (x) 3♣ was not alertable
if 3♣ was weak.
Has that changed?
I think so. BB 4 H mentions only a preemptive raise to the 3-level if next hand passes.
#6
Posted 2015-August-06, 04:06
StevenG, on 2015-August-06, 03:46, said:
1♣ (pass) 3♣ was alertable
1♣ (1♠) 3♣ was alertable
1♣ (x) 3♣ was not alertable
if 3♣ was weak.
Has that changed?
Yes, that's true, and yes, it's changed. 1♣ (1♠) 3♣ weak used to be non-alertable, then changed to being alertable with the 2006 Orange Book, then back to non-alertable when the Blue Book came in (2013 I think). The other two haven't changed in at least 20 years.
#7
Posted 2015-August-06, 05:00
#9
Posted 2015-August-06, 08:06
#10
Posted 2015-August-06, 08:07
#11
Posted 2015-August-06, 08:52
TMorris, on 2015-August-06, 08:06, said:
What would they play 1♣ (1♠) 2♠ as showing?
London UK
#13
Posted 2015-August-06, 09:34
#14
Posted 2015-August-06, 09:35
VixTD, on 2015-August-06, 06:28, said:
This violates the sensible principle of "at most one unalerted meaning" and creates a situation where you have to ask every time you need to know. Or every time the auction comes up, if you want to avoid the transmission of UI. I think that this was a backwards step.
#16
Posted 2015-August-06, 12:26
barmar, on 2015-August-06, 09:34, said:
Yes, but the light bulb doesn't stay lit; most club players stay "new" forever.
#17
Posted 2015-August-06, 16:13
StevenG, on 2015-August-06, 03:46, said:
1♣ (pass) 3♣ was alertable
1♣ (1♠) 3♣ was alertable
1♣ (x) 3♣ was not alertable
if 3♣ was weak.
Has that changed?
campboy, on 2015-August-06, 04:06, said:
You are probably too young to know, but the 1998 Orange Book was itself a change. Before 1998 a pre-emptive raise was explicitly defined as alertable. The reason why it reverted to alertable in 2006, according to the then Editor of the Orange Book, was because so many people had told him that pre-emptive was an unusual meaning and that the L&E concluded that they had got it wrong in 1998.
I'm not so sure you are right about the current position.
The Blue Book 2013/2015 section 4H (Specific Cases) starts: "The following are interpretations and examples of the above directives.". Note the word "examples".
Then in 4H2
Quote
<snip>
c)Responses to a non-forcing opening bid of one of a suit:
(1)If the next hand doubles, a pass that could have 10+ HCP or other defined characteristics
(2)If the next hand passes,a pre-emptive raise to three
So yes, we know that 1♣[non-forcing]-Pass-3♣ is alertable if pre-emptive but, unlike the 1998 Orange Book, the Blue Book makes no specific comment about the sequence 1♣-(1♠)-3♣.
As this sequence is not included in the list of examples it would seem that we should revert to the basic alerting rule in 4B1[b]. Is pre-emptive a "potentially unexpected meaning"? For many players, I think the answer is yes [the posts of StevenG and TMorris confirm this] . For this reason I continue to alert a pre-emptive call in this situation.
#18
Posted 2015-August-06, 16:36
gordontd, on 2015-August-06, 08:52, said:
The longest book I have read on competitive bidding is Acol in Competition, written by Eric Crowhurst in the 1980s. That states that a cue bid of the opponents' suit in this situation is a general game force, best reserved for three situations:
(i) a balanced game force with no suit worthy of mention
(ii) when the overcall has deprived you of your normal response
(iii) when you have a fit for opener's suit and control of the enemy suit.
I think that "general game force" is the traditional Acol meaning. Certainly if I were playing in a simple systems event, I would assume Responder's jump raise after an overcall to be a limit raise.
#19
Posted 2015-August-06, 16:51
jallerton, on 2015-August-06, 16:13, said:
As this sequence is not included in the list of examples it would seem that we should revert to the basic alerting rule in 4B1[b]. Is pre-emptive a "potentially unexpected meaning"? For many players, I think the answer is yes [the posts of StevenG and TMorris confirm this] . For this reason I continue to alert a pre-emptive call in this situation.
Without any context, this would make sense. But the context is that the regulation has recently been changed from "after the next hand bids or passes..." to "after the next hand passes...", so someone must have thought about it and decided those two words shouldn't be there.
#20
Posted 2015-August-07, 00:28
Maybe it would help to understand the more general context of the Blue Book. Somebody high up in the EBU was of the opinion that the Orange Book (72 pages in 2006) was too long; the complilers of the Blue Book were asked to fit everything in 32 pages. Whilst some whole sections were removed, words had to be cut in all sorts of places. The section on specfic cases of what should or should not be alerted has been cut by a page, even though the basic principle (alert calls with potentally unexpected meanings and those which are not natural) has not significantly changed. The Blue Book was intended to be a more succinct document so we should not be surprised to discover that the examples do not cover every situation.