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I do play "could be short (as 2)" 1. I do Alert the calls that "do not encourage a preference, frequently longer clubs than diamonds." I expect that if I played 2 as 5+-and-4M, and 1NT as 12-15, so that 1 promised 3, I'd still Alert the calls that don't encourage a preference, but really wouldn't worry about the other inherences of the strong club. After all, I did tell them I played a strong club, and it's on the card that's facing them so they can read it.
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Yes, there's a difference. Is it significant? Doesn't seem so to me.

It does to me. A one card difference is often just bridge, and people will be one card different from expected in many situations. But a pure canapé opening 1 with 1=4=3=5 is not just bridge, but an unexpected agreement.

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I suppose it depends on what system you're playing, too. Playing Precision, with a 6-card 2 opening, you really have no choice with 1=4=3=5 but to open 1, unless your hearts are good enough to open 1 (and, presumably, you've agreed with partner that you might do that).

 

The bottom line, for me, in response to the original question, is that you announce "could be short" when the hand opening 1 could have fewer than three cards. You neither alert nor announce the opening if it requires at least three cards. The fact that opener might have five clubs is irrelevant. That's my reading of the ACBL regulation. Other jurisdictions may have different rules.

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There must be something wrong with the "reading" or with the wording of the regulations themselves if the following two things are both true:

 

1---People who treat reverses (after 1/1) as not necessarily extra strength, and don't know any better are required to alert what the rest of us think is highly unusual.

 

2---People who know what they are doing and will open 1-4-3-5 one diamond are not required to alert what the rest of us think is highly unusual.

 

Being prepared for a forcing club system does not, should not, require the opponents to know all that it entails. And TD's who believe the opponents should totally fend for themselves opposite a forcing club system are practicing favoritism/elitist thinking if they are the same ones who insist weak players doing what little they know should be held to a standard they know little about.

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I don't think anyone is suggesting that Mr. and Mrs. "We just started playing Duplicate last week" should be required to know all that Precision entails. Nor did anyone suggest that this couple should "totally fend for themselves". The fact remains that the regulation says what it says, and it doesn't take into account the level of experience or understanding of the players involved. At least, not directly.

 

It isn't about "what the rest of us think" either. It's about what the regulation says. "In light of historical usage". Precision has been around a long time. I don't think there's much in it that could be called "highly unusual and unexpected in the light of historical usage". A non-forcing reverse is another story.

 

Unless we decide that all players have to take a qualifying exam, and demonstrate that they know everything they're expected to know about the laws and regulations in place, before they're allowed to play (yes, of course that's never going to happen) we have to accept that people will play while ignorant of the rules, ignorant of the implications of their own bidding system, and so on. If someone violates a rule out of ignorance, the first order of business, it seems to me, is to educate them so they don't run afoul of the same problem again, and the second order of business is, where necessary, to redress damage to the NOS.

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There must be something wrong with the "reading" or with the wording of the regulations themselves if the following two things are both true:

 

1---People who treat reverses (after 1/1) as not necessarily extra strength, and don't know any better are required to alert what the rest of us think is highly unusual.

 

2---People who know what they are doing and will open 1-4-3-5 one diamond are not required to alert what the rest of us think is highly unusual.

 

Being prepared for a forcing club system does not, should not, require the opponents to know all that it entails. And TD's who believe the opponents should totally fend for themselves opposite a forcing club system are practicing favoritism/elitist thinking if they are the same ones who insist weak players doing what little they know should be held to a standard they know little about.

 

I don't know if that is what the regulation says but it seems pretty unreasonable that a player who has never heard or understood a reverse should be required to alert it. Against players whose methods I am unfamiliar with I routinely ask about the auction before the play and if necessary during the auction when there has been a 'reverse' to protect myself - its general bridge knowledge that a large number of players do not play reverses.

 

1 on 1=4=3=5 is not just 3+ it is a canape method. The alert procedures in ACBL albeit under 1/ openings says "Note that canapé systems must be pre-Alerted and canapé bids must also be Alerted during the auction."

 

I suppose that you can argue that one bid does not make your system canape but the language changes from canape systems to canape bids when changing from prealerts to alerts.

 

I think that there is a strong case that such a 1 should be alerted.

 

As a player for me the bottom line is would I be happy getting a good score because the opponents don't understand my methods. No I wouldn't. Therefore I have an obligation to disclose this. The alert procedures also say "The objective of the Alert system is for both pairs at the table to have equal access to all information contained in any auction." An advantage gained in this way comes because both pairs did not have "equal access to all information".

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I wonder what the ACBL was thinking when they wrote "canapé bids". Is it the initial, possibly (but not always) shorter suit bid, or the later bid in a suit that may be longer than the shorter first bid suit? If the latter, is a 2 rebid that might contain more clubs than the initial 1 bid has diamonds alertable? If not, why not?

 

I agree that the spirit of full disclosure may induce one to go further than the letter requires in alerting, but that doesn't make someone else's failure to do that illegal.

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Well, I had to agree with Cascade eventually!

 

If you open 1 systemically with 1=4=3=5 then you are playing a canapé system. My understanding of ACBL alerts is that canapé requires an alert. Therefore a 1 showing at least three cards but may have longer clubs is alertable.

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Well, I had to agree with Cascade eventually!

 

If you open 1 systemically with 1=4=3=5 then you are playing a canapé system. My understanding of ACBL alerts is that canapé requires an alert. Therefore a 1 showing at least three cards but may have longer clubs is alertable.

 

Is a 1 opening that "could be short" also a canapé system, then? If not, why not? What if the "could be short" suit is clubs?

 

It appears that a "canapé bid" is a rebid in a suit that could be longer than the first bid suit. This bid requires an alert. If you bid a "could be short" minor, then any suit you rebid could be longer than your minor. Are we supposed to alert all suit rebids after a "could be short" opening?

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While I don't see it codified anywhere in the laws, I strongly suspect there is a difference between balanced hands and unbalanced ones.

 

A canape bid (or system) involves choosing to open a shorter suit before a longer one on unbalanced hands. This is unusual and requires an alert (for a canape bid) or pre-alert (for a system in which canape bids are frequent). It's not totally clear whether it's the opening or rebid that should be alerted; in practice this probably depends on frequency. I think that the sequence 1-1M-2 should be alerted if the style is such that the clubs are often longer than the diamonds.

 

Opening balanced hands with 1m when holding a longer major is much more common than a canape approach (in fact it's part of American "standard") and this does not generally require a pre-alert or an alert during the auction. It does require an announcement ("could be short") if the minor suit opened does not require even three-card length.

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Is a 1 opening that "could be short" also a canapé system, then? If not, why not? What if the "could be short" suit is clubs?

 

As an outsider to ACBL alerting, I might suggest that if 1D is only short when then hand is balanced then it is not a canapé system. If the rebids show either a balanced hand or an unbalanced hand with diamonds as the longest suit, there is no rebid that shows a suit longer than diamonds (even if the there may be a suit longer than diamonds), there is no canapé rebid and it is not a canapé system.

 

But I presume that in a strong club system, 1 would always be the opening bid on 1=3=4=5 or 3=1=4=5. I suppose you can avoid rebidding 2 on these hands (raise to 2M or rebid 1NT) but perhaps 1 would always be a potential canapé opening.

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AWM and RMB1 seem to have it right about the balanced hands, but not quite about the unbalanced ones, IMO.

 

5-6 with the shorter major, 4-5 in the minors, etc are just Bridge at the time of the opening bid...maybe an agreement about what a rebid shows needs alerting.

 

Responding 1M bypassing a longer minor is common as well, but later rebids by responder which show (for instance) 4-6 Mm would be alerted.

 

However, those are not the same as opening 1D with 3-5 or 2-5 in the minors. Those are the ones common sense requires an alert, if not the exact present wording of the regs in ACBL.

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I disagree strongly about Precision 1D (even Precision 1D promising 3) being a canape system. There are *times* when they are opening their shorter minor, but they will open 1D with 1=4=4=4, and rebid clubs... They will open 1D with (13)=5=4 and rebid clubs...

 

2C doesn't *promise* longer clubs than diamonds, it (as I put it in my Alert) "doesn't encourage a preference". We don't bid our shorter suit first systemically, we bid diamonds first because we can't bid clubs - independent of the minors length.

 

Having said that, I *do* Alert the hands where partner "frequently has longer clubs than diamonds", and strongly think I should. However, I do play a "modern" 2+ 1D opener, so Announce that as well.

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What mycroft says is true. In England we have a definition of "possible canapé". A good example of this is in Blue Club per the original book, where the bidding sequence 1 1NT 2 shows an unbalanced hand, but either suit may be longer. However, the ACBL has "canapé" and otherwise: we have to fit things into that.

 

Now, if you are playing a natural system, whereby 1 2 2 shows spades as long or longer than hearts, and sometime you open 1 with

 

[hv=pc=n&s=skqt95hj87643daca]133|100[/hv]

 

that is not a canapé system: that is just bridge. Partner will treat the spades as equal length or longer.

 

But a Precision 1 which may be a 1=4=3=5 is different: partner knows it is quite possibly canapé into clubs, perhaps "possible canapé" as mycroft plays it. But the important thing is not to have secrets from your opponents, so when 1 is opened, you should alert it if it shows 3+ and may have longer clubs in an unbalanced hand. As for a doubleton 1 opening there is no need to worry about canapé: opponents are warned about your methods by the announcement "may be short".

 

So please remember it is not a question of trying to describe things carefully for some sort of arbitrary classification, it is a question of keeping opponents informed.

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