50% Convention
#1
Posted 2012-August-07, 16:59
"We have an inexperienced pair who have decided that when they ask 4NT for aces then they bid 5NT they are signing off not asking for Ks. They did this against Jack and he wasn't impressed. When she told me what they have decided to do with 5nt I said they needed to alert it when they sat at the table and on their system card. I told Jack and he said they can't do that - when they start on blackwood they have to continue etc cos you can't only use a part of a convention."
#2
Posted 2012-August-07, 17:12
Chris3875, on 2012-August-07, 16:59, said:
"We have an inexperienced pair who have decided that when they ask 4NT for aces then they bid 5NT they are signing off not asking for Ks. They did this against Jack and he wasn't impressed. When she told me what they have decided to do with 5nt I said they needed to alert it when they sat at the table and on their system card. I told Jack and he said they can't do that - when they start on blackwood they have to continue etc cos you can't only use a part of a convention."
Sounds like "Jack" is clueless
The ACBL GCC specifically authorizes "CALLS THAT ASK for aces, kings queens, singletons, voids or trump
quality and responses thereto".
It is debatable whether the 4NT bid that you describe should be called Blackwood, but that doesn't impact the legality of the convention. Moreover, the point is largely moot since you aren't supposed to provide a one word descriptor as an explanation.
(And I am equally clueless for quoting ACBL regs to a player from Oz)
#3
Posted 2012-August-07, 17:37
It's hardly something opps need to know about in advance so I wouldn't consider pre-alerting. I would put it on the convention card as a note to Blackwood.
#4
Posted 2012-August-07, 17:39
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#5
Posted 2012-August-07, 18:42
#6
Posted 2012-August-08, 06:41
as "to play", at least, if 4NT was RKCB, the agreed trump suit being a minor.
A standard system would be the French standard system.
With kind regards
Marlowe
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#7
Posted 2012-August-08, 09:16
hrothgar, on 2012-August-07, 17:12, said:
There's nothing unusual about the 4NT bid. The bid in question is the 5NT followup.
There's no rule anywhere that says you have to play "all of a convention". You can tweak conventions if you like, so long as the results are still within the allowed convention restrictions. For instance, you can play 1M-2NT as a game-forcing raise, just like Jacoby 2NT, but you don't have to play the same followons.
How do you think Roman Keycard Blackwood came about? A pair that was playing Blackwood decided to use slightly different responses.
Even among players that use 5NT as a King-ask, there isn't total agreement: some respond with the count of kings, some bid specific kings up the line.
#8
Posted 2012-August-08, 10:24
I mean, beyod the obvious minor-suit issue, There are tons of occasions at MP where 5NT and 5MAJ both make, especially if we have everything except two Aces. Why not, then, play 5NT as to play?
Moreover, when the answer is bad, this usually means that a more efficient way to ask for Kings exists. Playing normal Blackwood, for instance, after a 5♦ answer, five of the other major as King-asking makes a lot more sense than 5NT.
-P.J. Painter.
#9
Posted 2012-August-08, 11:39
If 5NT expresses a desire to play there then it is natural. How can anyone be damaged by this? Presumably if this was the final contract one might ask before leading anyway.
Clueless is a polite word for Jack's state. Another example of someone making up a rule as they go along in order to seek to substantiate the drivel they talk.
I think I would ask him to point to the book where it says this. No more playing Grand Slam Force unless you end in a Grand Slam perhaps!
#10
Posted 2012-August-08, 11:48
-P.J. Painter.
#11
Posted 2012-August-09, 02:41
kenrexford, on 2012-August-08, 11:48, said:
I think you have misunderstood Jack's problem. It is not so much that knowing 5N was natural would make it safe (!?) to bid. Rather, the problem is that unless he knows it is natural, he doesn't know that this could be his last chance to bid....
#12
Posted 2012-August-09, 07:17
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#14
Posted 2012-August-09, 10:22
WellSpyder, on 2012-August-09, 02:41, said:
blackshoe, on 2012-August-09, 07:17, said:
I don't want to do anything! It seemed clear to me that Ken was trying to wind us up (not for the first time, if memory serves), so I thought I would take it a stage further....
#15
Posted 2012-August-11, 21:17
In the ABF, all bids above 3NT (except Namyats I think) are considered self-altering. So there would have been no alert on the 5NT bid. But given it is quite an unusual bid, it would have been obvious (but maybe too late to be rectified). Never seen that convention but to be honest, I rarely ask for Kings - apart from yesterday, don't remember the last time I considered going for a grand. But there are weird conventions everywhere (at my club, Gerber rules )
#16
Posted 2012-August-11, 21:26
#17
Posted 2012-August-12, 03:08
Chris3875, on 2012-August-11, 21:26, said:
I think that "surprise" in this rule should be interpreted as "take unawares" rather than "astonish". It may be unusual to play 4NT then 5NT as a signoff, but nobody needs to prepare a defence to it. They only need to know about it when they're on lead.
I have dozens, probably hundreds, of unusual agreements which apply in constructive sequences but rarely occur. If I had to pre-alert them all, it would take about half an hour, and wouldn't benefit the opponents in the slightest.
#18
Posted 2012-August-12, 03:18
Notice that the regulation says "or". So it is apparently intended to include surprising agreements even if they don't require the opponents to prepare a defense.
#19
Posted 2012-September-07, 04:38
I don't think I have ever passed 5NT playing bridge with JACK (the computer program) as my partner. But on a few occasions I have passed a Blackwood 4NT, when JACK seems to have decided that I have shown three times as much as I hold. Whenever this happens, the bidding diagram on the screen shows my pass with an asterisk. Below the bidding, along with the other explanations of conventional calls, JACK inserts the annotation "Please wake up."
Please come back to the live game; I directed enough online during COVID for several lifetimes.
Bruce McIntyre,
#20
Posted 2012-September-07, 09:08
Some examples:
- "My opponent opened 3♣ and he only had six clubs. Is this allowed?"
- "My opponent overcalled 1♠ and he only had four spades. Is this allowed?"
- "My opponent opened 2NT and he had a singleton ace. Is this allowed?"
People play all sorts of things, some reasonable, some barmy. Unless it is a convention disallowed by the TO [and, with very rare exceptions, that means first or second round action which is not slam-oriented] it is allowed. I have known a pair who bid 4♣ for aces: after the response the player rebid 4NT which was intended and understood as ordinary Blackwood to make sure her partner had made the correct response first time.
So I cannot believe anywhere does not allow Blackwood with a 5NT rebid as signoff. Actually, for many of the club players I play against, it seems reasonable. One of the most common slam tries in local clubs is, after a sequence ending in one player bidding 3NT, partner bids 4NT. This is always intended and understood as Blackwood. After the response, on 80% of occasions the asker thinks for a very long time then bids 6NT. Since 5NT would ask for kings, there are three possibilities:
- It is a good grand, but they have no idea how to try for grand.
- They are in the correct contract.
- They are off two aces but have no idea how to stop.
What about the other 20%? Well, on 10% of occasions, they bid 5NT for kings, and then, whatever the response, think for some time and then bid 6NT [always 6NT].
On the other 10% of occasions, they signoff, usually because they are off one ace , and they do this by bidding 5NT, folding their cards up, putting them face-down on the table, and writing the contract on their score-card. Partners never show kings now.
For such players a 5NT rebid as signoff would be a good idea.
Merseyside England UK
EBL TD
Currently at home
Visiting IBLF from time to time
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