mikeh, on Mar 1 2007, 01:35 AM, said:
I have met and played against Glen several times and we have also exchanged quite a bit of e-mail over the years. You are correct - he is certainly highly intelligent. I don't recall ever seeing him do anything that I would consider even remotely unethical and I consider the sentiment he expresses repeatedly in this thread (ie that he genuinely cares about giving the opponents the information they deserve) to be further indication that he is one of the good guys.
I have more personal experience with Mike. Not only have we played against each other numerous times, I have also had the pleasure of being Mike's teammate in 2 World Championship Events. Mike one of Canada's leading players and he is also the sort of player who I would call an excellent "bridge thinker" (regular readers of Forums will know this already).
So I can genuinely add "with all due respect" to my claim that I think Mike's notion that Glen's 3NT should be pre-alerted is COMPLETELY off base
Here are some reasons:
- In general I don't think you are supposed to pre-alert anything unless the sponsoring organization tells you to do so.
- As far as I can tell, by definition anything allowed on the GCC does not require a pre-alert.
- In particular, using 3NT as a 4-level minor suit preempt (GCC-legal) or as a way to describe a hand with a long solid suit (also GCC-legal) do not require pre-alerts. To me the suggestion that an artificial 3NT opening does not require a pre-alert while a natural 3NT opening does to be completely bizarre.
- Defending against Glen's 3NT opening with no advanced discussion is trivial. Using a completely natural defense may not be optimal (and it may be), but it will work just fine. Probably only a very small % of partnerships who regularly play in GCC events have ever discussed defenses to things like "gambling 3NT" or "3NT=4-level preempt". These are not the sort of opponents who will be inclined to come up with an artificial and effective defense to Glen's 3NT opening at the table. In the unlikely event that some of Glen's opponents even try to do this, I think it is more likely they will be hurting themselves (by agreeing on something that is theoreticall unsound due to lack of time for proper thought/discussion or to have a misunderstanding as to what exactly they have agreed to).
- It is not appropriate to waste the opponents' time and make them worry about a bid that is unlikely to come up and is easy to defend against. Not that I would expect most of our ACBL regulars to get worried by such a pre-alert - most would just ignore it (and a few enlightened ones might correctly think "how silly").
I think brianshark was exactly right when he said:
Quote
But I would go even further and assert that the fact that we are even discussing this is a great illustration of just how messed up our game has become. Artificiality in bidding has become so widespread that (some) people, even some very good players, think they need advanced warning and protection against a natural bid. Meanwhile, the number of artificial bids that you run across on a regular basis continues to multiply. Very few people seem to worry about that.
Not sure if it was CSNY or Joni Mitchell who deserves credit for this saying this:
It's time to get ourselves back to the garden.
Fred Gitelman
Bridge Base Inc.
www.bridgebase.com