Trinidad Posted September 16, 2011 Report Share Posted September 16, 2011 The fact that 3NT has a decent chance of making as long as North follows the rules and does not use UI, is enough reason not to rule it a SEWoG (also if North happens to hold ♦AKQT9).I am afraid this makes no sense to me whatever, so perhaps you could explain it. :ph34r: I am sorry if I wasn't clear. The fact that the opening leader has UI from the explanation of 2♦ pretty much forces him to lead a heart. (It usually is an LA to lead your partner's suit and the UI makes this LA a lot less attractive.) I pointed out that 3NT has a decent chance of making on a heart lead. If you bid to a contract that has a decent chance of making (as long as the opponents play by the rules) then that can hardly be called a SEWoG. Note that I wrote this before I knew the entire hand and before I knew that declarer actually did seem to get a heart lead and "forgot" to test the clubs and take his 9 top tricks. Obviously, when declarer didn't make 3NT when he could have made it my point became completely irrelevant. But that knowledge wasn't available yet. Rik Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
blackshoe Posted September 16, 2011 Report Share Posted September 16, 2011 The ACBL regulation, quoted upthread somewhere, is part of the General Conditions of Contest, which are theoretically applicable at all ACBL Tournaments, including Sectionals. I don't think I've ever seen a ruling based on it, though. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mrdct Posted September 16, 2011 Report Share Posted September 16, 2011 The ACBL regulation, quoted upthread somewhere, is part of the General Conditions of Contest, which are theoretically applicable at all ACBL Tournaments, including Sectionals. I don't think I've ever seen a ruling based on it, though.The equivalent ABF regulation isn't so much for TDs to base rulings on, but is to give TDs the authority to tell a pair who is having an unacceptably high rate of system-forgets to either sort out their system or play something less complex. I'm not aware of any situation where a pair has actually been issued a PP or been forced to play a less complex system pursuant to this regulation, but I'm quite sure a few pairs have been given at least informal warnings to either get their act together or play something simple. Despite what bluejak maintains, I think there is a universal expectation at all levels of the game that partnerships ought to know their system. To play a system that one or both members of a partnership don't know properly is disruptive to the orderly conduct of an event and is discourteous to one's opponents. Adding to the list of "sensible" NBOs the EBU Tangerine Book states in Section 1: "One way to avoid problems is to avoid putting partner into a difficult position in the first place. Don’t think then pass when partner might have a problem, don’t sign off slowly if partner may want to bid on, and (easier said than done) don’t forget the system". (my emphasis added). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
YesHoney Posted September 16, 2011 Author Report Share Posted September 16, 2011 Don't know if it matters at this point: 2♦ bidder and his partner said at the table they discussed both possibilities (DONT and Capp) and agreed on DONT. 2♦ bidder remembered, his partner forgot.Lead was A♠. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
blackshoe Posted September 16, 2011 Report Share Posted September 16, 2011 It matters. We can't give accurate rulings if we don't have all the facts. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
peachy Posted September 16, 2011 Report Share Posted September 16, 2011 The ACBL regulation, quoted upthread somewhere, is part of the General Conditions of Contest, which are theoretically applicable at all ACBL Tournaments, including Sectionals. I don't think I've ever seen a ruling based on it, though. I'm surprised if there ever will be one. The wording is hazy enough to to allow arguments such as what "what is commonly occurring" etc. etc. The case has to be probably something like a misunderstanding in nearly every hand before any action is taken. Club level should be explicitly excluded from this regulation, but I really like it for higher level competition; however, the wording has to be tightened up before actual penalties can be given without counterargument (valid, too) from the pair that does not know its system. So far the only example which I remember from somewhere in the ACBL regulations, is that a common situation is first round of bidding in an uncontested auction. Not sure, if I actually read it in regulation or not. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Siegmund Posted September 16, 2011 Report Share Posted September 16, 2011 Suppose, for the moment, that all of the following are true: 1) NS's real agreement is diamonds and a major, so there really was misinformation;2) Had EW stopped in 3C, they would have gotten 130 or thereabouts;3) Had there been no misinformation, NS would might have played in 2S and given up only 100, or even made 2S (they will be doubled, but they arent vulnerable, and if North has six spades or otherwise-exciting distribuiton, he could easily lose just two spades and the cashable heart and club tops.) Is that a basis for ruling "no damage," period?Is that ONLY a basis for ruling "no damage" if you believe the 3NT bid was SEWOG? (My first take is that 3NT was pretty darn woggy, and that there are a lot of layouts where NS have 7+ tricks available in spades and/or 8+ tricks available in diamonds, but I have no idea how persuasive East's argument was, or how shapely the actual NS hands were.) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mrdct Posted September 16, 2011 Report Share Posted September 16, 2011 It matters. We can't give accurate rulings if we don't have all the facts.I still don't understand why people are second-guessing the facts as presented in the OP and reiterated in subsequent postings by Hanoi5 and YesHoney. The OP said: "the agreement for 2♦ was ♦ & M".Hanoi5 clarified: "DONT alerted by North as Majors".OP clarified: "2♦ bidder and his partner said at the table they discussed both possibilities (DONT and Capp) and agreed on DONT. 2♦ bidder remembered, his partner forgot". Also germane to the ruling, we were told by Hanoi5 that 3NT failed despite being in a makeable position which can only mean that sometime before North-South cashed-out, declarer got in and failed to play on ♣ which in my books is a serious error. Accordingly, East-West keep their poor table result and North-South get an adjusted score based on what would've likely happened in the auction had East-West been given a correct explanation of 2♦ and North-South not taken advantage of any UI to extricate themselves from their bidding misunderstanding (which I believe will be 2♠S-3). The side discussion about whether or not it is sensible to regulate that partnerships should know their system, perhaps belongs in the Changing Laws & Regulations forum; but in relation to the Australian regulation I posted above, one needs to understand that most of the high-level bridge in Australia is more-or-less free of system restrictions so at different points in time we have had pairs playing some pretty weird stuff which is fine under our rules, but when you get a pair playing a weird system and they don't even know it properly it is a pain in the %^&* to play againsts them. My personal view (and apparently a non-mainstream view according to Bluejak) is that at all levels players should aspire to developing their partnership agreements and understandings such that you can have a sensible game against them without having to constantly involve the TD with misexplanations. As a "should" concept it describes best practice and failure to do it would rarely attract any penalty, but players should be aware that there is a general expectation that partnerships know their system. Let me present a hypothetical example of a weekly duplicate at small club in England where a keen young pair decide that "Standard English Acol" isn't quite floating their boat so they decide to load-up their system with various complicated, but legal, conventions including relay continuations after an artifical one-level GF response to a natural 1♣ opening. The problem is, every single time their GF auctions go beyond the third round of bidding, one or both of them forgets the structure and they wind-up misinforming their opponents, create a myriad of UI situations, randomise the results, annoy the punters and consume a disproportionate amount of the TD's time. Now tell me, would a TD not be doing his job properly if he didn't sit down with these fellas and tell them that if they are going play these methods at his club they have a reasonsibility to make sure they actually know their system and that if he doesn't see a significant reduction in the TD calls he receives due to their bidding cock-ups, he's going to ask them to play something less complex? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
aguahombre Posted September 16, 2011 Report Share Posted September 16, 2011 Let me present a hypothetical example of a weekly duplicate at small club in England where a keen young pair decide that "Standard English Acol" isn't quite floating their boat so they decide to load-up their system with various complicated, but legal, conventions including relay continuations after an artifical one-level GF response to a natural 1♣ opening. The problem is, every single time their GF auctions go beyond the third round of bidding, one or both of them forgets the structure and they wind-up misinforming their opponents, create a myriad of UI situations, randomise the results, annoy the punters and consume a disproportionate amount of the TD's time. Now tell me, would a TD not be doing his job properly if he didn't sit down with these fellas and tell them that if they are going play these methods at his club they have a reasonsibility to make sure they actually know their system and that if he doesn't see a significant reduction in the TD calls he receives due to their bidding cock-ups, he's going to ask them to play something less complex?His "job", at the club level, is more than just applying the written laws ---whatever the subject. It is to promote the game, provide a comfortable atmosphere for the players, and keep that 80 percent (alluded to earlier) coming back. I hope EBU clubs have the same lattitude to do that job as ACBL clubs do. Dealing with the above hypothetical pair in the manner described ---and backing up the words with action if necessary ---would be appropriate. If adhering to sound business practice crosses with the exact letter of the laws in this case, at this level, the governing body hopefully will side with the club director. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
blackshoe Posted September 16, 2011 Report Share Posted September 16, 2011 I still don't understand why people are second-guessing the facts as presented in the OP and reiterated in subsequent postings by Hanoi5 and YesHoney. The OP said: "the agreement for 2♦ was ♦ & M".Hanoi5 clarified: "DONT alerted by North as Majors".OP clarified: "2♦ bidder and his partner said at the table they discussed both possibilities (DONT and Capp) and agreed on DONT. 2♦ bidder remembered, his partner forgot". Hanoi5 was not the original poster, and while they are both in Venezuela, it wasn't clear (at least not to me) that they were both at the site where this happened. The OP said "2♦ alerted as Capp (M's), no particular agreement on X" and "at the end of the hand it is explained that the agreement for 2♦ was ♦ & M," which is an assertion, and hence evidence, that the agreement was DONT. It is not proof. OP stated two days and ten hours after the original post that the agreement was DONT, in the 29th post in the thread. It is thus not surprising that the previous 27 replies to the original post were not made with all the facts. Note that the message to which I'm replying here was a reply to my message (post # 30) replying to YesHoney's #29. I said "we can't give accurate rulings if we don't have all the facts" and I stand by that. Perhaps folks would like me to delete posts 2 through 28 (except perhaps for Hanoi's #9) and 29 through 34 and we can start over? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.