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The problem with the whole skip bid thing is that it doesn't really work. Take this last auction. Dealer, opens 2NT. That's a skip bid. Nobody gives a skip bid warning (well, I try to remember to do it, but I forget, too). Nobody worries about the mandated pause after such a bid. So responder does not get the mandatory pause he's supposed to get - and then he gets done for "hesitation" when it takes him six seconds to figure out what to do. TDs should, I think, rule in this position that a "hesitation" of up to about 12 or 13 seconds from the time 2NT was bid is not "undue" and so conveys no UI. But they don't. Nor do ACs. But I don't think adding a mandatory pause after a 3 overcall is any solution. People don't follow the existing rule, they won't follow this new one. And then what if we did impose it? Is responder now entitled to 20 seconds to decide what to do? I think we should either enforce the existing regulation, or find some completely different way to handle the problem. I confess that I have no idea what that way should be.
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Nobody gives a skip bid warning (well, I try to remember to do it, but I forget, too). Nobody worries about the mandated pause after such a bid.

I'm told this is true (though a bit of an exaggeration) in North America, but it's not in other places where the regulation applies.

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I'm told this is true (though a bit of an exaggeration) in North America, but it's not in other places where the regulation applies.

Oh, it's true in NA. A bit of an exaggeration? Well, maybe, if you look at the whole continent. Not so much in my little corner of it. :)

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Um, it might have helped solve a problem in this instance (or might not have) but I don't want to play in a bridge game where I have to wait 12 seconds to pass over every 2NT opening bid on my right. Sorry!

 

With all due respect, this south (I also know this pair) wouldn't have used that time to consider what to do over interference anyway. She would have waited to see what RHO would do, then started thinking. Trust me.

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I'm told this is true (though a bit of an exaggeration) in North America, but it's not in other places where the regulation applies.

Oh, it's true in NA. A bit of an exaggeration? Well, maybe, if you look at the whole continent. Not so much in my little corner of it. :lol:

It's definitely true in NA. I can count on my hands (maybe just one hand) the number of players I've encountered who pause after a skip bid. I try to do it, although I suspect my pause is closer to 5 seconds than the mandated 10 seconds -- 10 seconds is a really long time. I don't think there's any regulation ignored more than this one, it's a total failure in ACBL territory.

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Um, it might have helped solve a problem in this instance (or might not have) but I don't want to play in a bridge game where I have to wait 12 seconds to pass over every 2NT opening bid on my right. Sorry!

It is a very easy habit to get into, and works well around the world, excluding North American and Australia. It is no more difficult than leading face down.

 

The problem with the whole skip bid thing is that it doesn't really work. Take this last auction. Dealer, opens 2NT. That's a skip bid. Nobody gives a skip bid warning (well, I try to remember to do it, but I forget, too). Nobody worries about the mandated pause after such a bid.

In the Nationals, one player in thirty gives a skip bid warning - and I do not, since I do not see the point in giving a warning which seems ignored. But a fair proportion pause over skip bids, and I certainly do.

 

Tangent: Does any one else wish that overcalls of NT bids or strong forcing bids  were treated as skip bids for stop card/hesitation purposes.

While the skip bid warning works fairly well in other jurisdictions, part of the reason is the simplicity of the rule. I wonder whether it would work as well if the times it was used were made more complex, and I doubt it.

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Um, it might have helped solve a problem in this instance (or might not have) but I don't want to play in a bridge game where I have to wait 12 seconds to pass over every 2NT opening bid on my right. Sorry!

It is a very easy habit to get into, and works well around the world, excluding North American and Australia. It is no more difficult than leading face down.

I agree, it's very easy. But difficulty is not the issue. Sitting there holding a flat 2 count picking my nose for an extra 30+ seconds because the auction went 2NT p 4NT p 6NT all to solve a problem that is extremely unlikely to exist to begin with is not my idea of a good time.

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Even with the most ordinary of hands it is my view that you will take a little time because the auction is a shock and will jostle you out of your normal environment.

Only if you were about to bid - not if you were going to pass. So the UI from the slow pass may well suggest that the player was intending to bid, not pass.

And the UI from a quick pass would be that you have balanced garbage. Just as bad. This time bluejak is spot on; the average amount of time taken by third hand in the unusual situation where someone calls over a 20-22 (I presume) 2NT might well be 5-7 seconds. And I would play that pass is forcing, and double is penalties, but those methods will no doubt be described as ridiculous. I don't think one can tell partner to pass it out - except by passing instantly.

 

So, taking 5-7 seconds to bid in this situation does not DEMONSTRABLY suggest one action over another; it is usually just an indication that one has not discussed whether pass is forcing and what double means. Come to think of it, I have not discussed this with any of my regular partners (and don't be mean by asking "how come you have any regular partners?") ...

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If a 5-7 second pause isn't a break in tempo, is there a corollary that after a fast pass opener is obliged to bid 3NT with a hand of this type? And would I have much success with a director or committee in arguing that?

I know that you would bend over backwards to select the LA that was not suggested by the VARIATION in tempo over what you expected from the given situation. It would not reach a director or committee as I would never have substantial reason to believe you had not fulfilled your obligations under 16B3 - even if you had had to scour the White Book and the EBU site to find out what they actually were.

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I have sorta lukewarm feelings for the stop card myself although in UK and NL almost everyone use it correctly.

 

In practice, people will not pause ten secs after 1NT-(pass)-3NT. I think that most understand that while the rule has been made to apply to all skip bids for simplicity, it is really intended for situations in which one is likely to have something to think about and that a fast action therefore transmits information.

 

Maybe for less experienced players it is good to have a simple rule for when you have to avoid calling too fast to create UI to your partner. On the other hand, in an ideal World players would know in which situations the tempo is likely to create problems, and understand that this is not related to skip bids per se.

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The problem with the whole skip bid thing is that it doesn't really work. Take this last auction. Dealer, opens 2NT. That's a skip bid. Nobody gives a skip bid warning (well, I try to remember to do it, but I forget, too). Nobody worries about the mandated pause after such a bid. So responder does not get the mandatory pause he's supposed to get - and then he gets done for "hesitation" when it takes him six seconds to figure out what to do.

Weird. If Blackshoe is correct in his claim that there was a stop-card violation, then why did the director, committee, and reporter fail to mention such a relevant infraction?

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In the ACBL, Nigel, the skip bid (or stop card) warning is optional. Players are not required to give the warning. Failure on the part of skip bidder's LHO to pause for approximately ten seconds, while at least appearing to consider his hand, is a violation of regulation, with or without a warning. So if you're asking why no one brought up the "infraction" of failing to give the warning, the answer is that it isn't one. If you're asking, though, why neither the table TD nor the AC in the instant case pointed out a "failure to pause" infraction, I don't know, I wasn't there. Ask them.
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If the 3H overcaller really disregarded the simple no-brainer skip-bid regulation then the director should ignore his complaint that his LHO took 5-7 seconds to act. The director might argue, on the contrary, that the player may have passed with undue haste since he had at least 3 seconds to spare. Such excellent regulations are specifically designed to prevent this kind of avoidable problem. I feel, however, that this prior infraction is a salient fact that should be specified to those asked to comment on a ruling.
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I agree, it's very easy. But difficulty is not the issue. Sitting there holding a flat 2 count picking my nose for an extra 30+ seconds because the auction went 2NT p 4NT p 6NT all to solve a problem that is extremely unlikely to exist to begin with is not my idea of a good time.

I do not suppose passing on such hands, or even holding such hands, is your idea of a good time either. But once you get into the habit you do not notice it anyway.

 

There can be problems on many sequences - notably 1NT p 3NT, where the pause is definitely necessary, because every so often you have a solid suit type of hand and were expecting RHO to pass or transfer, and 3NT is a definite surprise.

 

The suggestion that players will know when to pause and when it is not necessary is ludicrous. The average player cannot even understand why you alert Puppet Stayman - twice this week a player has had to be convinced - and everyone would have different views. For example, how many people realise that 1NT p 3NT is one time you must pause?

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If the ACBL player really disregarded the simple no-brainer skip-bid regulation then the director should ignore his complaint that his LHO took 5-7 seconds to act. He could argue, on the contrary, that he may have passed with undue haste since he had at least 3 seconds to spare. Such excellent regulations are specifically designed to prevent this kind of avoidable problem. I feel, however, that this prior infraction is a salient fact that should be specified to those asked to comment on a ruling.

The bid immediately before the hesitation was not a skip bid.

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If the ACBL player really disregarded the simple no-brainer skip-bid regulation then the director should ignore his complaint that his LHO took 5-7 seconds to act. He could argue, on the contrary, that he may have passed with undue haste since he had at least 3 seconds to spare. Such excellent regulations are specifically designed to prevent this kind of avoidable problem. I feel, however, that this prior infraction is a salient fact that should be specified to those asked to comment on a ruling.
The bid immediately before the hesitation was not a skip bid.

I understood Blackshoe's post. I still feel that it's reasonable for the skip-bidder's partner to rely on his RHO complying with a simple basic regulation. But nobody has yet confirmed that this earlier infraction occurred and if so, why it wasn't considered relevant.

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The average player cannot even understand why you alert Puppet Stayman

lol neither can I

Nor I. It can only be helpful to remind pard of what your answer will be. But as has been pointed out in the past by David --u alert it because you have to alert it, so there. :)

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I agree, it's very easy. But difficulty is not the issue. Sitting there holding a flat 2 count picking my nose for an extra 30+ seconds because the auction went 2NT p 4NT p 6NT all to solve a problem that is extremely unlikely to exist to begin with is not my idea of a good time.

I do not suppose passing on such hands, or even holding such hands, is your idea of a good time either. But once you get into the habit you do not notice it anyway.

 

There can be problems on many sequences - notably 1NT p 3NT, where the pause is definitely necessary, because every so often you have a solid suit type of hand and were expecting RHO to pass or transfer, and 3NT is a definite surprise.

 

The suggestion that players will know when to pause and when it is not necessary is ludicrous. The average player cannot even understand why you alert Puppet Stayman - twice this week a player has had to be convinced - and everyone would have different views. For example, how many people realise that 1NT p 3NT is one time you must pause?

I agree, the pause after 1N p 3N is DEFINITELY necessary. Similarly, a pause after 1S (2H) is DEFINITELY necessary. EVEN MORE so. Even more important is the pause after (1D).

 

Seriously, you only think the pause after 1N p 3N is absolutely necessary because that's what you are used to. There are many other auctions where a mandatory pause would be much more frequently useful.

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It's also a matter of perception. What's slow to one person isn't necessarily slow to everyone. And in fact the laws suggest that it's not just okay, it's a good idea to maintain a consistent tempo, even if that tempo is considered slow by some (within reason, of course).
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While the skip bid warning works fairly well in other jurisdictions, part of the reason is the simplicity of the rule.  I wonder whether it would work as well if the times it was used were made more complex, and I doubt it.

Some European countries use a "Stop" warning for all competitive bids at the 3-level and above. My experience of this is limited, but I think that it works fairly well.

 

I have to agree that the use of the stop card is a very easy habit to get into. Some years ago I never used it, and now I always do. Yes, people often bid before I have taken away the card, but at least they virtually always pause for a little while.

 

Bluejak, if I were playing in North America I would certainly use the "Stop" card. If the opponents ignore it then you will have some protection if a ruling is needed.

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