alertable cue-bid ?
#1
Posted 2015-July-09, 07:47
I open 1C (precision) and the LHO bids 2C.....sometimes the LHO might mean it to be natural and other times another LHO might mean it to be Michaels.....The advice some directors are giving me is 'we should ask', which I do not want to do... (why help my opponents out).
so my question is, does RHO need to alert the 2C bid if it is Michaels or does he need to alert it if it is natural or does he not need to alert it at all.....Assume that LHO and RHO do have a partnership agreement and are not confused
#2
Posted 2015-July-09, 07:56
The ACBL alert procedure defines a cuebid as "a bid in a suit which an opponent has either bid naturally or in which he has shown four or more cards."
This is not a cuebid. So they should alert if they have the agreement that it is artificial.
#3
Posted 2015-July-09, 08:08
#4
Posted 2015-July-09, 10:59
helene_t, on 2015-July-09, 07:56, said:
This is not a cuebid. So they should alert if they have the agreement that it is artificial.
Accurate. Also, they should alert if they have the agreement that it shows clubs and also says something about another suit. I don't know whether these two-suited type bids are technically "artificial". If they are, Helene already covered it in her reply.
#5
Posted 2015-July-09, 11:41
Don't expect to win this one with a ruling, especially when you don't ask, or with most club directors, or generally are more interested in keeping the peace versus enforcing the laws.
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#6
Posted 2015-July-09, 12:08
#7
Posted 2015-July-09, 15:10
Shugart23, on 2015-July-09, 12:08, said:
Or you could ask.
#8
Posted 2015-July-09, 16:11
You Just Have To Ask, and you have to be suspicious - just like the people who play Landy/NT, or the people who play natural/weak NT (but something artificial/"real" NT). Oddly enough, you also need a defence to (1♣!)-2♣ "I have no clue what that means". Especially because at least half the time, they really do have no agreement...
#9
Posted 2015-July-10, 07:23
mycroft, on 2015-July-09, 16:11, said:
You Just Have To Ask, and you have to be suspicious - just like the people who play Landy/NT, or the people who play natural/weak NT (but something artificial/NT). Oddly enough, you also need a defence to (1♣!)-2♣ "I have no clue what that means". Especially because at least half the time, they really do have no agreement...
Yeah, I got into a discussion with this with the director last night and he also suggested asking...I guess my problem with asking is that it allows the opponents to communicate unauthorized information to one another during the bidding auction ( it's hard to believe that opponents will use the UI). I question why is it my obligation to do that which serves to help their defense? If I am damaged because the opponents failed to alert, don't the rules give me redress at the end of the play ?
#10
Posted 2015-July-10, 07:40
Shugart23, on 2015-July-10, 07:23, said:
Not sure I understand your point. If you don't believe your opponents will use the UI, why should you care if they transmit any?
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
#11
Posted 2015-July-10, 07:53
blackshoe, on 2015-July-10, 07:40, said:
Sorry, I was being sarcastic.....of course they will use the UI...They will either use it during the bidding auction or upon opening lead
#12
Posted 2015-July-10, 08:31
Shugart23, on 2015-July-10, 07:53, said:
Well, you should get redress, but anyway solution that seems to fit all of your criteria is to ask the opponents at the beginning of the round.
#13
Posted 2015-July-10, 08:45
Vampyr, on 2015-July-10, 08:31, said:
That is a good plan. But, I don't think at the beginning of the round it would occur to me to ask the opponents whether they make artificial bids in the same suit over an artificial bid.
#14
Posted 2015-July-10, 09:15
aguahombre, on 2015-July-10, 08:45, said:
SO, just hypothetically speaking, let's say I open 1C and LHO bids 2C (meaning Majors) but is not alerted. I, perhaps foolishly, don't ask and assume it's a natural Club bid and eventually wind up in 4S doubled down 2 for 500..
I wonder what the rules specifically say should happen ( I already can hear the director telling me I should have asked, but I don't think I would find that in the rule book)
#15
Posted 2015-July-10, 09:32
aguahombre, on 2015-July-10, 08:45, said:
Well, you would have already told them that you play a strong club; how hard is it to add "What's your defense to that?"
#16
Posted 2015-July-10, 09:39
Shugart23, on 2015-July-10, 09:15, said:
I wonder what the rules specifically say should happen ( I already can hear the director telling me I should have asked, but I don't think I would find that in the rule book)
Yes, my comment was about asking what 2c would mean before the start of the round. Your concerns assume I didn't do that, which I probably wouldn't have -- and are valid.
I believe we have a right to assume, and should be protected by assuming, that a known experienced pair will comply with the alert procedure. But, there are many problems with that.
We have chosen to pay off when our question might wake the opponents up or reassure them about their own agreements in this type of situation. We ask consistently in early doubtful competitive auctions, so that whether we ask or not will not itself be construed as UI. We have documented this policy.
#17
Posted 2015-July-10, 11:41
aguahombre, on 2015-July-10, 09:39, said:
I confess I don't see the problem. My regular partner usually volunteers (at the beginning of the round) our defense against a strong club when our opponents are playing it. This kind of annoys me, but it seems pretty simple for them to ask. If the OP can't be bothered to do that I have zero sympathy for him. Of course the defense should be on the CC, but not everyone fills in their CC as thoroughly as they might.
Maybe the OP prefers to assume the opponents are cheating, and to get an adjustment every time he opens a strong club, but that seems, to me anyway, not a lot of fun.
#18
Posted 2015-July-10, 11:59
Vampyr, on 2015-July-10, 11:41, said:
Maybe the OP prefers to assume the opponents are cheating, and to get an adjustment every time he opens a strong club, but that seems, to me anyway, not a lot of fun.
Blimey, I am just asking a rules question, not looking for your sympathy. ( I don't assume everybody is cheating. I just don't feel like helping my opponents out.)
The first thing I do when I sit down at the table is announce that I play Precision and weak NT and give them every opportunity to discuss what they want to do before bidding starts.
Then we all bid and Bob's your uncle
#19
Posted 2015-July-10, 12:50
The relevant regulations from the Alert procedure (for your side):
- Players who, by experience or expertise, recognize that their opponents have neglected to Alert a special agreement will be expected to protect themselves.
- Adjustments for violations are not automatic.
- There must have been misinformation.
- An adjustment will be made only when the misinformation was a direct cause of the damage. Note also that an opponent who actually knows or suspects what is happening, even though not properly informed, may not be entitled to redress if he or she chooses to proceed without clarifying the situation.
I bet that no more than 10% of ACBL players would be able to work out what is the alertable meaning for double and/or 2♣ over a strong club (and fewer over a Polish or Swedish club); take out those that actually *play* one, and you may not even make it into what the curling world calls "crooked numbers" (you know, 2, 3, ...)
I bet that no more than 30% of ACBL partnerships know their methods against a strong club. By know, I mean not just "it's on the card", but "if they open 1♣ and my partner makes a call, I can explain what it means and be sure that both I'm right and that partner got it right".
You know that, I know that, most Precision players (and weak NTers) figure it out pretty quickly. Frustrating I grant.
I also note that, like my bugbear of "forget transfers", (1♣)-2♣ "clubs or majors" (with or without "depending on whether he forgot again") is a legal agreement over a Precision club. Perhaps the right thing to do is create a counter-defence to that agreement and play it over all meanings, the same way my defence to 1NT-X is the same no matter what they claim it means. I don't really know.
#20
Posted 2015-July-10, 16:28
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