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Polling question


McBruce

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Looking for answers to polling questions before you comment on the ruling I made:

 

Online Virtual ACBL game, matchpoints, your side is vulnerable:

 

KT

QT953

K96

654

 

Partner opens 1 in second seat and RHO overcalls 3. You choose double and LHO passes. Partner continues with 4 and RHO passes. You now bid 4 and LHO passes. Partner bids 4NT and RHO passes.

 

What calls do you consider?

 

If 4NT followed a significant tempo break, what would that suggest?

 

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Partner had A3 A7 AT85 AKT82. The break before 4NT was over 90 seconds according to table history, with no intervening chat or questions. 4NT was the final contract, making ten tricks with opening leader holding a club void and Jxx of hearts along with his J98xxxx of spades. The pair objected to my ruling that responding to Blackwood was a LA and holding four aces the 4NT bidder would continue, getting them to six. They did not dispute that 4NT was ace-asking, only that the player in question had the right to use judgment and pass even after the forever tempo break. I ruled 6NT-2 which cost them about half a board and moved them from 2nd O/A to 6th, about 0.90 silver points less. This happened on the penultimate deal of the tournament and I was unable to poll as I normally would in the 20 minutes we are given before results become final (actually, I used much of the time to ask people if they thought there was a possibility that 4NT might not be ace-asking in that sequence, which turned out to be a non-issue). You can confirm my guesses as to the results of that poll by giving opinions on the poll questions above as well as the ruling itself.

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Looking for answers to polling questions before you comment on the ruling I made:

 

Online Virtual ACBL game, matchpoints, your side is vulnerable:

 

KT

QT953

K96

654

 

Partner opens 1 in second seat and RHO overcalls 3. You choose double and LHO passes. Partner continues with 4 and RHO passes. You now bid 4 and LHO passes. Partner bids 4NT and RHO passes.

 

What calls do you consider?

 

If 4NT followed a significant tempo break, what would that suggest?

 

...

 

...

 

...

 

...

 

...

 

...

 

...

 

...

 

...

 

...

 

...

 

Partner had A3 A7 AT85 AKT82. The break before 4NT was over 90 seconds according to table history, with no intervening chat or questions. 4NT was the final contract, making ten tricks with opening leader holding a club void and Jxx of hearts along with his J98xxxx of spades. The pair objected to my ruling that responding to Blackwood was a LA and holding four aces the 4NT bidder would continue, getting them to six. They did not dispute that 4NT was ace-asking, only that the player in question had the right to use judgment and pass even after the forever tempo break. I ruled 6NT-2 which cost them about half a board and moved them from 2nd O/A to 6th, about 0.90 silver points less. This happened on the penultimate deal of the tournament and I was unable to poll as I normally would in the 20 minutes we are given before results become final (actually, I used much of the time to ask people if they thought there was a possibility that 4NT might not be ace-asking in that sequence, which turned out to be a non-issue). You can confirm my guesses as to the results of that poll by giving opinions on the poll questions above as well as the ruling itself.

 

Results are dubious without agreements to all the actions.

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Playing a normal system I consider 5 - he's telling me to pick a minor, he might be 5-6 or something; or answering blackwood. I don't think it's to play. After the pause, I think it could be to play, after partner tries to work out if it's safe to bid it, or if I might think it was blackwood.

 

If you can find enough people who would pass this, then it's reasonable to not be obnoxious about your ruling; I don't expect you will. To me, it's clear that the pause showed concern about going farther.

 

I would consider giving bits of 5NT-1 (pick a slam, passed) and 6 whatever it scores, and possibly even bits of 5 if the 4NT bidder convinced me zero would keep him out of slam (assuming 5 is zero). Yes, I know, split scores and BBO.

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I think class of player is important.

 

All of my club members, a couple of whom might be Flight B and the rest are Flight C (and Flight D), would take 4NT as Blackwood. In fact the reason that they could have bid 4 is because 4 would be Gerber!

 

I was thinking of passing, but I'm a Flight A player.

 

I don't think the length of the hesitation is particularly important to me, as I'd expect partner to know that this call has multiple meanings and none of them are clear. However, to many others, a slow 4NT would suggest that they are not comfortable with this being taken as Blackwood.

 

I think your ruling was fine, especially if the pair agreed that it was clearly ace asking.

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I think class of player is important.

 

All of my club members, a couple of whom might be Flight B and the rest are Flight C (and Flight D), would take 4NT as Blackwood. In fact the reason that they could have bid 4 is because 4 would be Gerber!

 

I was thinking of passing, but I'm a Flight A player.

 

I don't think the length of the hesitation is particularly important to me, as I'd expect partner to know that this call has multiple meanings and none of them are clear. However, to many others, a slow 4NT would suggest that they are not comfortable with this being taken as Blackwood.

 

I think your ruling was fine, especially if the pair agreed that it was clearly ace asking.

 

My worry would be that the hesitation DOESN'T suggest pass.

 

I'm visualising partner with a spade void wondering what he can do that I'm not going to pass, 4 looks too much like heart agreement, then he realises blackwood is unambiguous if it's 4 ace holds the other 3 but what suit is it blackwood in if any ? etc

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They did not dispute that 4NT was ace-asking, only that the player in question had the right to use judgment and pass even after the forever tempo break.

What is missing, is what the 4NT player was going to do after he got the answer. We don’t know what their agreement is, but he would know that it should show no aces. Was he going to pass or would he have gone forward? He should be quite convincing to make me believe that he would have passed 5 or 5, but who knows? But otherwise I would probably have come to the same result as you. And I would also have pointed out that a player not only has the right to use his own judgment but should do so, but that he, using that judgment, should avoid to give the impression that he might have used UI. Answering to Blackwood is a LA here and passing is, IMO, not. Any partnership should get in trouble if one of the partners didn’t feel the obligation to answer bids like Stayman, transfers or ace asking.

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Unless of course the partnership discloses their agreement to pass such bids under certain conditions. 1nt 2♧ is explicitly not self forcing on my convention card for instance. Several low level pairs here seem to play 1nt 4nt as non forcing Blackwood (partner replies Aces if convinced he has enough points).
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I would expect 4NT here to be pick a minor, although it could be RKCB for hearts. I think that a slow 4NT suggests that if it were live play, partner would have been folding his cards and starting to write the contract down to try to get you to passI

 

I would poll players of similar ability. Then poll different people with each choice in response, eliminating the pass of course which I expect to be demonstrably suggested. Assuming you tell them that your 4NT was RKCB for hearts, and 5C shows 0 key cards, they will surely pass that now. A lot depends on which response shows 0 keycards.

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according to the OP the 4NT bidder expected 4NT was ace-asking. Who, in their heart, truly knows 100% what this bid means in this auction (okay, the "4NT is always blackwood, 4C is always Gerber" pairs. Apart from those)? Which, of course, means that "tank-for-90-seconds" 4NT is either:

- I don't want this to be ace-asking, or

- partner might not think this is ace-asking

 

I note that either of those, with a spade stopper, suggests "pass and hope to survive" over "do what's asked and hope we're on the same page".

 

I can't really think of a position where passing a forcing bid in the presence of UI was not demonstrably suggested by the UI. Okay, "I psyched and am going to reveal it by passing the forcing bid". People just don't "use judgement" to pass forcing bids, in normal circumstances.

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Lacking any special agreement for the 4NT bid I (silly old-fashioned me) would have bid 5 ('no aces') and pass partner's next call unless it is 5NT to which I would have answered 6 ('two Kings').

 

(As TD I should rule on whatever final contract in which this auction probably would end.)

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I can't really think of a position where passing a forcing bid in the presence of UI was not demonstrably suggested by the UI. Okay, "I psyched and am going to reveal it by passing the forcing bid". People just don't "use judgement" to pass forcing bids, in normal circumstances.

 

Which is almost what this is, where has the other king I had when I doubled gone ?

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Which is almost what this is, where has the other king I had when I doubled gone ?
Sorry, if you believed that, you'd have passed 4. If you're only thinking of passing now, it can't possibly be because it wasn't an "obvious" 4NT, could it?

 

Aren't these the vast majority of club pairs, who are now playing in virtual club games?
I'm not talking them. I'm talking the people with the following agreements:
  • (3)-4-4; p. After seeing dummy (a strong 2=6=3=2): "what's 4?" "One ace."
  • 2 SAF-2 (1+ controls); 4NT "Keycard for diamonds".

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Sorry, if you believed that, you'd have passed 4. If you're only thinking of passing now, it can't possibly be because it wasn't an "obvious" 4NT, could it?

 

I want to be in game not a slam, I think it's vanishingly unlikely partner has enough for a slam, but at this stage he could easily be 0346/1345 and 4 might be the spot.

 

It doesn't appear to be the case for this pair, but imagine a situation where the player says "4N could be one of two things, both are forcing, but my answer to one of them is 5, to the other is 5 and giving the right answer to the wrong question is likely to be disastrous, I don't have a clue which it is, I don't want to be in a slam either way so I just passed 4N, all the hesitation suggested to me is that partner didn't know either". That would in my opinion a reasonable defence for passing a forcing bid.

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Lamford: that was what I was trying to imply with my correction. I wasn't clear, and your line is better.

 

Cyberyeti: I agree, it's a reasonable defence. I don't expect it to work opposite a 90-second pause, but it's not a "surely you don't believe that I'm that gullible?" argument. But as I said in the first instance, if the polling of your peers finds that everybody thought about passing and one actually did, while "the UI points to 'it's likely that partner will misunderstand me, or I've misunderstood him, and we're getting too high, let's try to play safe', bidding in an LA, any bidding leads to a worse score, we're adjusting", when delivering that ruling, I would be sympathetic about it.

 

3 AK7 AT85 AKT82. You *doubled and bid your suit*, how much stronger do you think partner has to be than that (which is 1 HCP lower than the actual) before his keycard-for-hearts is mindless and automatic? How much more does he need, even with potential bad breaks, to *make* 6 round, or even 6NT, even having wrongsided it? The Q? If he has a mindless and automatic call, and you pass making +2...

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Lamford: that was what I was trying to imply with my correction. I wasn't clear, and your line is better.

 

Cyberyeti: I agree, it's a reasonable defence. I don't expect it to work opposite a 90-second pause, but it's not a "surely you don't believe that I'm that gullible?" argument. But as I said in the first instance, if the polling of your peers finds that everybody thought about passing and one actually did, while "the UI points to 'it's likely that partner will misunderstand me, or I've misunderstood him, and we're getting too high, let's try to play safe', bidding in an LA, any bidding leads to a worse score, we're adjusting", when delivering that ruling, I would be sympathetic about it.

 

3 AK7 AT85 AKT82. You *doubled and bid your suit*, how much stronger do you think partner has to be than that (which is 1 HCP lower than the actual) before his keycard-for-hearts is mindless and automatic? How much more does he need, even with potential bad breaks, to *make* 6 round, or even 6NT, even having wrongsiding it? The Q? If he has a mindless and automatic call, and you pass making +2...

 

If he's much better than that he has a 4,4N or 5N bid over my double rather than bidding 4, 4 is limited in my book and part of why I don't want to be in a slam.

 

Polling is a difficult thing here, because a lot of people would not have doubled, and to poll peers you want people who would double.

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