Alert Beyond 3NT Level Player Bids 4C and Alerted by his Pd
#1
Posted 2019-October-19, 00:33
Player Bids 4C ( Asking Aces ), His Partner Alerts,
Opponents Object , saying Do Not Alert Any Bid Beyond 3NT.
Is it Correct ??
#2
Posted 2019-October-19, 01:18
captyogi, on 2019-October-19, 00:33, said:
Player Bids 4C ( Asking Aces ), His Partner Alerts,
Opponents Object , saying Do Not Alert Any Bid Beyond 3NT.
Is it Correct ??
It depends on the relevant regulation in force, but I believe this is almost correct in most jurisdictions.
The exceptions are (possibly) artificial opening bids, and also any artificial call when screens are used.
#3
Posted 2019-October-19, 01:37
#5
Posted 2019-October-19, 01:54
sanst, on 2019-October-19, 01:37, said:
Thank You. Noted.
#6
Posted 2019-October-19, 02:36
#7
Posted 2019-October-19, 03:00
sanst, on 2019-October-19, 01:37, said:
This is exactly the same in Italy too, and probably in several countries as it is a cut and paste of WBF policy.
#9
Posted 2019-October-19, 05:21
Cyberyeti, on 2019-October-19, 04:04, said:
The EBU regulation does not include alerting 4NT, 5NT, ... bids ever.
"Robin Barker is a mathematician. ... All highly skilled in their respective fields and clearly accomplished bridge players."
#10
Posted 2019-October-19, 05:41
RMB1, on 2019-October-19, 05:21, said:
OK, didn't know that, but this was 4♣
Also I can see that this can cause problems as I suspect pretty much nobody at my club knows this:
I'd never seen anybody use 2N-5N as anything other than bid 6 with a minimum and 7 with a maximum. Hence a 2N-5N-6N auction is likely to pass without questions. We came across a pair playing it as pick a slam, so I'd have felt very peeved if I'd misdefended based on my misconception that they'd shown a minimum.
#12
Posted 2019-October-19, 07:46
- 4♣ (Gerber)?
- 4N (Specific ace ask) ?
- 1♠ Pass 4♣ (Splinter)?
- 1♠ Pass 2♠ Pass 4♣ (Splinter)?
- 1♣ 4♣ (Pre-empt) Pass (Forcing)?
- 1♣ 4♣ (Pre-empt) Double (Take-out)?
- 1♣ 4♣ (Pre-empt) Double (Lead-directing)?
- Pass (Natural) Pass 1♠ Pass 4♣ (Splinter)?
- Pass (Forcing) Pass 1♠ Pass 4♣ (Exclusion)?
No. I don't now the answers. I doubt any player does. IMO...
- All calls should be announced by the caller's partner (preferably by pointing to relevant boxes in a matrix of common explanations).
- The only exception being when opponents ask you not to announce.
- Even then, the declaring side would have to explain their auction before the opening lead.
These suggestions would save rain-forests. They would simplify relevant rules, perhaps enabling some players and directors to understand them. Arguably, they would also make the game more fun, speed it up, and reduce UI.
#13
Posted 2019-October-19, 08:18
nige1, on 2019-October-19, 07:46, said:
- 4♣ (Gerber)?
- 4N (Specific ace ask) ?
- 1♠ Pass 4♣ (Splinter)?
- 1♠ Pass 2♠ Pass 4♣ (Splinter)?
- 1♣ 4♣ (Pre-empt) Pass (Forcing)?
- 1♣ 4♣ (Pre-empt) Double (Penalty)?
- Pass (Natural) Pass 1♠ Pass 4♣ (Splinter)?
- Pass (Forcing) Pass 1♠ Pass 4♣ (Exclusion)?
No. I don't now the answers. I doubt any player does. IMO...
- All calls should be announced by the caller's partner (preferably by pointing to relevant boxes in a matrix of common explanations).
- The only exception being when opponents ask you not to announce.
- Even then, the declaring side would have to explain their auction before the opening lead.
These suggestions would save rain-forests. They would simplify relevant rules, perhaps enabling some players and directors to understand them. Arguably, they would also make the game more fun, speed it up, and reduce UI.
Most of these are easy
1:Alertable
2:Not
3:alertable
4: not
7:alertable
5 and 6 presuming 4♣ is an overcall probably are, 8 I would need to look up.
We add a load of things that really ought to be alerted to be fair to the opposition in our system, 4♣-P-4N is the "I've got your side suits buttoned up, can you play a slam opposite small singleton or void in your suit" bid, 3♥-P-4N is voidwood with a void spade.
Bonus question: 3♥-4N(excl void ♠)-5♦-6♥ opps look at card, "is that one of 5 or one of 4", you reply truthfully "one of 4", any redress when it wasn't the 4 they had in mind ?
#14
Posted 2019-October-19, 09:46
Cyberyeti, on 2019-October-19, 08:18, said:
1:Alertable
2:Not
3:alertable
4: not
7:alertable
5 and 6 presuming 4♣ is an overcall probably are, 8 I would need to look up.
We add a load of things that really ought to be alerted to be fair to the opposition in our system, 4♣-P-4N is the "I've got your side suits buttoned up, can you play a slam opposite small singleton or void in your suit" bid, 3♥-P-4N is voidwood with a void spade.
Bonus question: 3♥-4N(excl void ♠)-5♦-6♥ opps look at card, "is that one of 5 or one of 4", you reply truthfully "one of 4", any redress when it wasn't the 4 they had in mind ?
May I too jump into the fun Loony Quiz, rather than discuss the merit of nige1's argument
2. Not alertable seems crazy to me, this is a bug in your regulations.
5. and 6. I suspect he meant 4♣ as a raise, in which case 5. alertable, 6. not over here (not an automatic choice I agree).
8. Is an amusing provocation - if forcing pass were allowed without screens then I guess it should but does not constitute part of the first round of bidding.
It's a tad academic however, akin to whether a redouble of 7NT must be followed by 3 passses to end the auction.
Bonus Question. Yes they get redress if damaged even though they were hapless. Also see reply to 2.
#15
Posted 2019-October-19, 10:04
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 2019-October-19, 10:37
pescetom, on 2019-October-19, 09:46, said:
2. Not alertable seems crazy to me, this is a bug in your regulations.
I can see what you're getting at but for 4N if you don't have this rule:
2N-4N-5♥ is a 5 card heart suit slam try
2N-4N*-5♥ is 2 aces and no 5 card suit
I see less potential abuse with 5N, although I suppose it's still there
#17
Posted 2019-October-19, 11:21
Cyberyeti, on 2019-October-19, 08:18, said:
1:Alertable
2:Not
3:alertable
4: not
7:alertable
5 and 6 presuming 4♣ is an overcall probably are, 8 I would need to look up.
We add a load of things that really ought to be alerted to be fair to the opposition in our system, 4♣-P-4N is the "I've got your side suits buttoned up, can you play a slam opposite small singleton or void in your suit" bid, 3♥-P-4N is voidwood with a void spade.
Bonus question: 3♥-4N(excl void ♠)-5♦-6♥ opps look at card, "is that one of 5 or one of 4", you reply truthfully "one of 4", any redress when it wasn't the 4 they had in mind ?
That opponents ask a deficient question does not mean that you a should give a deficient reply. It reminds me of when we used to alert weak openings instead of announce them: 2♠(Lucas) “is it weak?””yes”.
But this is one reason that it is best to just ask what it is. And if they give you a convention name, ask again.
#18
Posted 2019-October-19, 11:25
Cyberyeti, on 2019-October-19, 10:37, said:
2N-4N-5♥ is a 5 card heart suit slam try
2N-4N*-5♥ is 2 aces and no 5 card suit
I see less potential abuse with 5N, although I suppose it's still there
It doesn’t look like 4NT is an opening bid in your examples. I am certain that a 4NT opener is alertable no matter what it means (or announcable if natural).
#19
Posted 2019-October-19, 11:42
Cyberyeti, on 2019-October-19, 10:37, said:
2N-4N-5♥ is a 5 card heart suit slam try
2N-4N*-5♥ is 2 aces and no 5 card suit
Sure, the potential of a 2-way agreement is there, although I would want to see the system card if they tried to pull the second on me, and of course they can only write one thing there (mine says 4NT = quantitative).
#20
Posted 2019-October-19, 13:30
pescetom, on 2019-October-19, 06:57, said:
Even if they are arficial openings (Acol 4NT anyone) ?
EBU Blue Book 4B4
"Once the auction is above the level of 3NT, no calls are to be alerted except for:
(a) Artificial suit bids above 3NT made before the opening bidder’s second turn to call (i.e. the first bid and the next three calls)"
(my emphasis)
"Robin Barker is a mathematician. ... All highly skilled in their respective fields and clearly accomplished bridge players."