lamford, on 2014-November-25, 06:44, said:
I believe that there was an old edict, possibly promulgated by an erstwhile L&E Chairman, that a slow Pass and a slow Double both indicate that you do not want the bidding to end. By the same token, I think that a slow invite usually indicates that you want partner to accept.
That is often the case but I believe that you are not meant to argue that way. Especially because some players seem to use hesitations to try to
prevent action by partner.
lamford, on 2014-November-25, 06:44, said:
I think I am supposed to declare that I was on the AC and also that this opinion does not replace the official write-up, which I think is available immediately from the TD rather than in a few months time.
In the old days, committee members were told to confine their comments to the official appeal report.
dburn, on 2014-November-25, 12:06, said:
North had an opening bid facing an opening bid, and he invited game rather than bidding it. Does he need an ace more than an opening bid to have more than a minimum invitation facing an opening bid? Of course he had a maximum invitation, and South (who had no extras at all) should not have accepted it.
Does that mean dburn agrees with the rulings?
jallerton, on 2014-November-25, 17:25, said:
That does not follow at all. If I know that partner is conservative, I know from AI, not UI, that his invitations are up to strength. On the other hand, if I know that partner is aggressive in this situation, I know from AI, not UI, that he will have bid game already on a stronger invitational hand so when he does invite he tends to hold a weaker hand.
I'm unsure whether the following argument is valid. If not, what's the flaw in it?
- If a conservative partner makes a hesitant game-try, then it's unlikely that he swithered between passing and making a try. A more likely explanation is that he has a hand on which others might have bid game; so the hesitation suggests bidding game.
- If an aggressive partner makes a hesitant game-try, then it's unlikely that he swithered between bidding game and making a try. A more likely explanation is that he has a hand on which others would not have made a try; so the hesitation suggests stopping.
jallerton, on 2014-November-25, 17:25, said:
You are advocating an "if it hesitates, shoot it" approach. Sorry, that is not what the Law says.
It might be better if the law were changed
jallerton, on 2014-November-25, 17:38, said:
If I understand you correctly, you only asked two players what they thought the UI suggested. I don't think that the TD/AC should attach too much weight to a sample size of 2!
I guess that Vixtd found it hard enough to find her original sample of 4 appropriate players. If the committee felt that was inadequate, they might have conducted their own poll.