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EBU alertable or not


Cyberyeti

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I don't think you should need to know whether they're playing a forcing diamond raise or not. As a lot of people do play one, this meaning is potentially unexpected. Rather less people play a GF 3 card raise of 1M (particularly in the UK where 4M is still common), so I think the 3 card 2 would fall under GBK.

General bridge knowledge is something that would be an agreement without discussing with a new partner. I fail to see how a response on 3 card suit at the 2 level at the first opportunity as being potentially a forcing diamond raise would fall into this category.

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General bridge knowledge is something that would be an agreement without discussing with a new partner. I fail to see how a response on 3 card suit at the 2 level at the first opportunity as being potentially a forcing diamond raise would fall into this category.

 

I think it would be assumed in the partnership as soon as the discussion got as far as "inverted minors - no", but should not need to be by opps. I was talking about the 3433 2 response to 1 as GBK.

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General bridge knowledge is something that would be an agreement without discussing with a new partner. I fail to see how a response on 3 card suit at the 2 level at the first opportunity as being potentially a forcing diamond raise would fall into this category.

 

Yeah, this is why Cyberyeti said it was "potentially unexpected".

 

I don't think that GBK covers any bidding agreements at all, but any case I lean strongly toward non-alertable on this one. This is because it may not be an agreement, but instead made up on the spot.

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Yeah, this is why Cyberyeti said it was "potentially unexpected".

 

I don't think that GBK covers any bidding agreements at all, but any case I lean strongly toward non-alertable on this one. This is because it may not be an agreement, but instead made up on the spot.

It's one of those things that just about everyone "makes up" the same way. So it seems like an agreement or convention, but it's really more a consequence of common bridge logic. It's like reversing or jump-shifting into a 3-card suit as a solution to the MSC death hand -- every experienced player eventually runs into this situation, and usually comes up with the same solution.

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It's one of those things that just about everyone "makes up" the same way. So it seems like an agreement or convention, but it's really more a consequence of common bridge logic. It's like reversing or jump-shifting into a 3-card suit as a solution to the MSC death hand -- every experienced player eventually runs into this situation, and usually comes up with the same solution.

I don't really buy this. It may be true that most systems have holes that require you do deviate, and it may be GBK that in such cases you are more likely to everstate minor suit length than major suit length. But in which situations this applies is system dependent.

 

The OP case was a situation in which the pair did not have a forcing minor suit raise. It is not GBK that a respond in the other minor can be fake unless you play in an environment where most people don't have a forcing minor suit raise, and even then it may well be that most pairs will use a jump shift (or Gerber or whatever) instead of a simple shift.

 

The "Death hand" is only a death hand if you play a system in which it is a death hand. Maybe in some areas most people play such a system so it is GBK, but then you might still have to alert it if you go to a country in which most people don't play such systems.

 

Case in point: Playing forcing 1NT (or just a strong notrump system in which 5M332 is not normally opened 1NT),

1M-1NT

2*

can be a 3-card suit. I believe that is not alertable in ACBL. It is not alertable in NBB. But it is in EBU. This is not about different attitudes to alerting, it is about differences in locally popular systems.

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I think it also used to be alertable in ACBL. But I think the game-forcing 2/1 response was also alertable at that time. Our alerting regulations evolve as the popularity of different bidding systems change. With the majority of players either playing 2/1 or encountering it so much that they can't help but be familiar with it, we've stopped alerting bids whose meanings come from common inferences. The same happened with Walsh-style responses to 1 openings.
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How often will these manufactured bids come up? 1/100, 1/1000

If you start alerting these rare possible bids pretty soon your alerting every bid because there is some chance partner could be bidding out of system. Once you alert everything you might as well alert nothing as it serves no purpose.

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How often will these manufactured bids come up? 1/100, 1/1000

If you start alerting these rare possible bids pretty soon your alerting every bid because there is some chance partner could be bidding out of system. Once you alert everything you might as well alert nothing as it serves no purpose.

 

It's not partner making a bid out of system, it's alerting your opponents that this is a bid which might cover a hole in your system where there is a not unusual situation (GF diamond raise without another suit) and no system bid.

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So the question becomes how unexpected is it to invent a 2 bid when the system has no forcing diamond raise?

This is a genuinely silly argument Barry. How unexpected is it to be playing a natural 2 opening when the system uses a strong or mixed 1? I would imagine you would still expect to be alerted of the fact. As soon as you make alerts dependent on the opps understanding how the pair's system works, you are really making the system worthless. GBK should never be dependent on understanding hidden parts of a system you have never played!

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This is a genuinely silly argument Barry. How unexpected is it to be playing a natural 2 opening when the system uses a strong or mixed 1? I would imagine you would still expect to be alerted of the fact. As soon as you make alerts dependent on the opps understanding how the pair's system works, you are really making the system worthless. GBK should never be dependent on understanding hidden parts of a system you have never played!

That's not a fair argument, because the alert regulations specifically say that strong 2 is the non-alertable meaning, and anything else is alertable. We only fall back on the "potentially unexpected" (or ACBL's "highly unusual and unexpected") criterion when dealing with bids that the regulations don't directly address.

 

It's also the general spirit that guides the people who create the alerting regulations in the first place. If we required pre-alerting of a strong club system, it might not be unreasonable for that to obviate alerting a natural 2.

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