Posted 2021-December-29, 10:30
Potentially paradox - I'm willing to play 5♠x or 6♦x? I "know" partner has spades because I have ♦xxxx? Given 5♣ wasn't doubled, does he think that 5♠ or 6♦ could *make*? I mean, sure, he should know that west raised on at most two, therefore it was bid on power, but given the rest of the auction, will he?
I don't know the Alerting regulations in Italy - it could be that some cuebids are Alertable and some are "self-Alerting". Or all. Or none. Or, given this is online, some equivalent to ACBL's Appendix O "it's encouraged to explain unusual things, even if not technically Alertable" applies. I definitely would have explained straight up, but then again, I know that "Michaels over weak 2s" isn't a universal thing - those that play it mostly don't.
It could also be that the correct explanation is "spades and a minor" same as (1♥)-2♥ would be and again, South doesn't know any better and can't tell the difference between what he said and what their agreement is.
But the damage was "failure to double in an auction where you bid game on power not shape". Even if it turns out that the 5 level can only go down 2, I don't see any use of UI here. Okay, so what the director said was wrong - "NS gave you the chance for the top, not their fault you didn't take it" - but equally unimpressed.
It took forever to bid 3♥? And what, precisely does that show? That's a question that needs answering and to me, it means "I don't really have my two-suiter for some reason." What that reason is seems difficult to guess (here it's "don't preempt over a preempt", but it could have been 4216 or 4126 [*] and "I can't double, but I don't want to lose the spades by bidding 3♣", or it could be some other flaw, or it could even be "do we play this as Michaels or as stopper-ask? Is partner going to be sure?"
And even if partner knows it's "don't preempt over a preempt", how did he use that information? He doubled 4♥ for penalty, and when partner pulled it, he chose to play in the other suit.
So that's use of UI. "Whenever there's MI, there's UI, and vice versa" (though less so online). So what about the MI?
Let's assume for argument that "two suits" is misleading and it is actually "spades and a minor" (note that if "two suits" is correct, but North thought it was "spades and a minor", the "we don't really have an agreement as to which two suits" is the "correct agreement" for the purposes of calculating damage). Would West do anything different at all? I mean, they complained when dummy came down, not when they found out about North's hand. So...? I can't see any difference to West's bidding if South guaranteed spades over South guaranteeing a pointed suit ("I didn't double in case South had the minors and we can't set 6♣ with 100 honours in their second suit on a trump lead (automatic given North pulled 5♣)?")
Allowing 5♠ to play undoubled is what caused the damage, and it was not caused by anything the opponents did or didn't do.
There isn't in my eye any use of UI - I can't even tell what the UI "demonstrably suggests".
There might have been a misdescription of their agreement, but while that is an infraction, it doesn't lead to an adjusted score without damage. And I think a quick "so now you can see why your explanation was both incomplete and misleading, and on other hands could have caused damage?" solves that problem for the future.
I am a strong proponent of "We don't have to make the case, that's what the director is for. We just have to call the director when it looks like there is an issue." But this director can't see any infraction causing damage. If E-W disagrees, now they will in fact have to make the case to the director. I am very happy to be shown my blind spots; I am not going to give out "they did something wrong, we get a good score."
Okay, if the argument they give me (reading the thread more carefully) is that 3♠ is an option over "spades and a minor", and that was their agreement, then I have to look. But North is still going to double 4♥, and South is still going to pull, and they're still going to get to 5♠, and is the ♣A the tipping point, even if they're going to show it? Similarly, without the known cuebid, X-then-4♥ gets the same point across, and East now knows to double with the ♣A (assuming that doesn't mean "I want to sacrifice", I guess).
Now, if I did believe that there was use of UI or MI that caused damage, do I think that failing to double is an extremely serious error? In the ACBL, if they're of any skill at all, yes. This is "failing to play bridge to your level". You bid game on power, they don't get to play undoubled, even if it makes. But the ACBL is known to be overly harsh here (with good reason, even if that good reason is irrelevant to 90% of players). In RoW, I'm not sure.
* Minor add: okay, with the hearts North has, it won't be 42 anything. But how about 40(45) or 5035 and being concerned that his next action is what to lead?
When I go to sea, don't fear for me, Fear For The Storm -- Birdie and the Swansong (tSCoSI)