Short suit 1-level responses apparent conflicting info from ACBL
#1
Posted 2011-September-06, 12:22
| Having spent an hour or so pondering the mysteries of the General
| Conditions and Midchart, and looking at ACBL's alertable calls
| pages, I have concluded that it is General Conditions-legal to
| respond 1D to 1C, and 1M to 1D, with fewer than 4 cards so long as
| the call is alerted as a "may be short" kind of thing.
|
| Anyone have certain knowledge regarding this issue?
|
| Regards and Happy Trails,
|
| Scott Needham Boulder, Colorado, USA
I have "certain" knowledge in the form of an email from Flader. Both
he and Beyes reviewed. A 3card major response to a minor suit opening
is considered a treatment and, as such, is legal in all GCC events
provided it is alerted.
A 1D response to 1C can be anything you want...
**********************************************************
| [mailto:jsn_colorado@comcast.net] To: Rulings@acbl.org Sent: Mon,
| 18 Jul 2011 15:30:09 -0600 Subject: 1C-1D and 1D-1M
|
| Having spent an hour or so pondering the mysteries of the General
| Conditions and Midchart, and looking at ACBL's alertable calls
| pages, I have concluded that it is General Conditions-legal to
| respond 1D to 1C, and 1M to 1D, with fewer than 4 cards so long as
| the call is alerted as a "may be short" kind of thing and is not
| part of a relay structure.
|
| Am I correct?
|
| Regards and Happy Trails,
|
| Scott Needham Boulder, Colorado, USA
Dear Scott,
You are correct about a 1D response to a 1C opening, but, a 1 of a
major response that may be fewer than four cards is a convention and
not permitted. Note that conventional responses are permitted as long
as they show game going values and are not part of a relay system. 1D
is allowed because it is specifically describred on the GCC.
Regards,
Mike Flader
**********************************************************
Anyone with experience that might help me understand how to put the point more finely for resubmission to Rulings/Flader?
Regards and Happy Trails,
Scott Needham
Boulder, Colorado, USA
#4
Posted 2011-September-06, 14:25
#5
Posted 2011-September-06, 14:28
Is it possible to delete the thread from this forum?
This post has been edited by inquiry: 2011-September-06, 15:31
Reason for edit: moved to correct forum - duplicate deleted
#6
Posted 2011-September-06, 15:51
Flem72, on 2011-September-06, 12:22, said:
[snip]
I have "certain" knowledge in the form of an email from Flader. Both
he and Beyes reviewed. A 3card major response to a minor suit opening
is considered a treatment and, as such, is legal in all GCC events
provided it is alerted.
A 1D response to 1C can be anything you want...
[snip]
Dear Scott,
You are correct about a 1D response to a 1C opening, but, a 1 of a
major response that may be fewer than four cards is a convention and
not permitted. Note that conventional responses are permitted as long
as they show game going values and are not part of a relay system. 1D
is allowed because it is specifically describred on the GCC.
Regards,
Mike Flader
**********************************************************
Anyone with experience that might help me understand how to put the point more finely for resubmission to Rulings/Flader?
Regards and Happy Trails,
Scott Needham
Boulder, Colorado, USA
Your assertion that Mike Flader and Rick Beye agree that a three card major response to 1♦ is legal under the GCC (first paragraph quoted above), is directly contradicted (correctly) by Flader's response (also quoted above). The GCC defines as "natural" a bid in a major suit which shows at least four cards. Your response, showing only three (even if it's "three or more") is therefore conventional. As such, it is governed by item 3 under "Responses and Rebids" on the GCC, which says that such a bid is legal only if it's game forcing. Your suggested meaning is not game forcing, therefore it is illegal.
The legality of an agreement, and whether a call requires an alert, are two different things, handled by two different and independent regulations. Whether a call requires an alert is irrelevant if it's illegal.
Sorry, but I don't think re-wording the question will get you a different answer.
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
#7
Posted 2011-September-06, 16:12
SN
#8
Posted 2011-September-06, 16:59
Perhaps the answer is to look at the GCC ourselves. As I remember it, fewer than 4 cards in a major is a convention, and thus the 3-card major response is illegal unless allowed by the GCC - and I do not think it is.
Merseyside England UK
EBL TD
Currently at home
Visiting IBLF from time to time
<webjak666@gmail.com>
#9
Posted 2011-September-06, 20:15
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#10
Posted 2011-September-06, 20:46
"3+ in a minor and 4+ in a major for opening bids, rebids and responses."
Of course the Alert Procedures are talking about agreements to do something, not what a responder might do. So, without agreement, if responder might for some reason choose to bid 1h with 3 over 1D and opener is unaware, that is a different story.
This post has been edited by aguahombre: 2011-September-06, 20:56
#11
Posted 2011-September-06, 21:49
Phil, on 2011-September-06, 20:15, said:
I may be wrong but thought that was where support doubles (and redoubles) came from as they were getting to the occasional 3-3 fit.
When I open 1♦ on a 3-1-5-4 and pard responds 1♥ I'm prone to bidding 1♠ next. Not alerted and the last thing pard expects me to have but we are alergic to bidding 1nt with singletons and it's usually mp's.
I thought (think?) that the ACBL regulations are still allowing this on the principle of "within 1 card length wise and 3 HCP's" but interested in other views.
What is baby oil made of?
#12
Posted 2011-September-06, 22:44
I have no idea what Meckwell do, but I hope they're not using their stature to get around the rules.
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
#13
Posted 2011-September-07, 06:18
Phil, on 2011-September-06, 20:15, said:
Meckwell don't play in GCC events, now, do they? However, when I discussed these emails with some of our very experienced local players, including a couple of directors, they were all a bit perplexed, saying that they often respond 1M to 1D on 3 when playing inverted minors. Is this one of those "so long as partner must assume it's intended as natural" things, like bidding the unbid minor when not playing NMF in 1m-1M/1N-2om?
Regards and Happy Trails,
Scott Needham
Boulder, Colorado, USA
#14
Posted 2011-September-07, 06:51
#15
Posted 2011-September-07, 07:44
Flem72, on 2011-September-07, 06:18, said:
If you (or your partner) responds 1M to 1m on 3 cards frequently enough to establish an implicit agreement to do so, that agreement will be illegal under the GCC. Until that time, your deviation from your agreement that it will be four cards is legal. This is true no matter who does it, and no matter if they've never received an adverse ruling for doing it. Note, however, that what constitutes sufficient frequency to establish an implicit agreement is a matter for TD (not player) judgement. The same applies to your example sequence regarding 2om.
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
#16
Posted 2011-September-07, 15:10
And in Meckwell's case they play a strong club system, and 1♦ is nebulous. I suspect that's why they don't raise it, they need to find out what opener's actual shape is before continuing.
Temporizing bids go back at least as far as Goren, but the GCC doesn't make any mention of them.
#17
Posted 2011-September-07, 15:51
barmar, on 2011-September-07, 15:10, said:
Meckwell play 1♦-P-2♦ as game forcing with six diamonds. I expect, but don't know, that the 2♣ response may cover a range of other game forcing hands.
However these are not the interesting hands. It is what you respond with weaker 3=1=4=5 and, especially, 1=3=4=5 hands where a tendency to bid the three-card major can develop into a partnership agreement.