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adjustment?


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2) Non-alerted 1 is perfectly "normal" bid in the sense that any player has the right to assume that it is natural - and does NOT HAVE to protect himself by enquiring.

(Just because the opening bid is strange (and alerted), I don't have to protect myself by ASKING about the meaning of non-alerted bids, the absence of alert indicating they're basically natural)

... and ...

5) Again, candybar, I don't like the approach that "opponents were expected to ask about the bidding if it was alerted.", especially since the (totally artifical) bid was NOT alerted. Surely you don't expect players to ask about non-alerted bids that are made in response to any alerted bid.

The ACBL Alert Procedure contains these two statements:

 

-- Players who, by experience or expertise, recognize that their opponents have neglected to Alert a special agreement will be expected to protect themselves.

 

-- 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.

 

While I realize that the ACBL does not include the entire world, and other countries than the US might have different approaches, I have yet to see anything better, more carefully thought out, or more fair, than the ACBL Alert Procedure. It is this on which I based my statements.

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2) Non-alerted 1 is perfectly "normal" bid in the sense that any player has the right to assume that it is natural - and does NOT HAVE to protect himself by enquiring.

(Just because the opening bid is strange (and alerted), I don't have to protect myself by ASKING about the meaning of non-alerted bids, the absence of alert indicating they're basically natural)

... and ...

5) Again, candybar, I don't like the approach that "opponents were expected to ask about the bidding if it was alerted.", especially since the (totally artifical) bid was NOT alerted. Surely you don't expect players to ask about non-alerted bids that are made in response to any alerted bid.

The ACBL Alert Procedure contains these two statements:

 

-- Players who, by experience or expertise, recognize that their opponents have neglected to Alert a special agreement will be expected to protect themselves.

 

-- 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.

 

While I realize that the ACBL does not include the entire world, and other countries than the US might have different approaches, I have yet to see anything better, more carefully thought out, or more fair, than the ACBL Alert Procedure. It is this on which I based my statements.

Does that mean that when you fail to alert an artifical bid and I call the TD, he will scrutinize me, asking whether I know your bidding system? That it just ridiculous.

 

I believe these statements are here to prevent doubleshots where the expert player waits to see whether it will be better to get an adjustment or to let the opponents bid something wrong.

 

Typically, when I think that opponents might be bidding something wrong, I will NEVER ask about their bids before bidding is over, unless I really NEED to know immediately what is going on. I certainly do not wish to investigate whether a particular bid should have been alerted or not.

 

And I think that any TD would have a hard time proving that I was supposed to know that a certain response was artifical UNLESS I play a very similar system.

 

If the ACBL rules really want me to protect myself so carefully in order to help opponents clarify their own bidding, then I must say I'm happy to live in another country :)

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There is, however, a major problem here if an auction can go like this:

 

1 alerted

Pass

1 not alerted

Pass

1

Pass

1

End

 

If dummy does not somehow get the information that 1 was not self-alerted, he cannot do what dummies are expected to do in offline bridge:

 

"Uh, before you lead, there was a failure to alert 1"

 

Isn't this a major problem?

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There is, however, a major problem here if an auction can go like this:

 

1 alerted

Pass

1 not alerted

Pass

1

Pass

1

End

 

If dummy does not somehow get the information that 1 was not self-alerted, he cannot do what dummies are expected to do in offline bridge:

 

"Uh, before you lead, there was a failure to alert 1"

 

Isn't this a major problem?

I would call it a small problem, but I do think everybody should be able to see partner's alerts/explanation as soon as the auction is over (in case his side became declarer) or after the play has finished (in case he was defending).

 

Arend

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If the ACBL rules really want me to protect myself so carefully in order to help opponents clarify their own bidding, then I must say I'm happy to live in another country :P

Don't worry.

 

In this case, none of the regulation's criteria for self-protection seem to have been met. I believe that every ACBL director I have discussed this type of situation with would adjust the score. The purpose of the regulations is to protect the non-offending side, not to provide blanket protection for people who fail to Alert.

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