Alert rules Question
#21
Posted 2012-August-23, 14:15
I agree with ACBL Announcements, except in that they (not the ACBL, the nature of Announcing) encourage Announcing of other things that are less trivial.
Whether it be 2♦ "waiting" over strong 2♣, or "Flannery" or "transfer" 2♠ after 1NT (and especially especially when it's "either minor" rather than a transfer"), that is annoying.
I think the balance they've made is perfect for the ACBL game.
#22
Posted 2012-August-23, 18:06
blackshoe, on 2012-August-23, 07:10, said:
If one of the partners has forgotten their agreements, you will get UI, when you wouldn't with normal alerting, because the opponent would just glance at the system card and neither partner would be any the wiser that one has forgotten an agreement.
What makes announcing better than the opponents being expected to glance at the CC? I can only see negatives.
I promise not to make any more posts in this thread since I won't achieve anything so please say whatever you want to in defence of announcements :-)
#23
Posted 2012-August-23, 20:56
An if a partner or I did forget (I.e., I forgot I was playing mini-NT and opened a flat 15 count 1nt) and now there is UI, oh well, the primary duty is to inform the opponents and people in possession of UI should know how to behave (I reject all invites because for a 15-17 nt I'm minimum even though I'm a super max for a 10-12 nt).
I mean, if you really are trying to avoid UI and use the CC why alert at all? Why not just require the opponent to look at the convention card? The same issues around forgets and UI come up with alerts.
#24
Posted 2012-August-24, 09:14
Mbodell, on 2012-August-23, 20:56, said:
Agree with all of this. Few people have convention cards at clubs, and if they do, looking at them when it might influence what you are about to say carries UI, in my view. If partnerships announce the meaning of calls, the UI is not there at all. As for UI on the other side, on partnerships that get something wrong, that is very rare in comparison, and if it happens then they are constrained in their continuations.
Moreover, it makes for a much steadier flow of the game if things are announced. No need to take time to look at the card, no need to take time to ask questions. Just get on with the bridge.
#26
Posted 2012-August-24, 19:27
Stayman and major suit transfers are extremely popular. Therefore alerting them is pointless as you are unlikely to ask; asking every time would be tedious. But the time these 2-level suit bids are something other than Stayman or simple transfers, you need to know.
Similarly with weak twos. I would like to know if my opponents; 2-bids are weak, intermediate or strong, and especially if they are two-suited (this one is alerted while the others are anniunced), which is probably more popular than the latter two options combined.
Don't forget that announcements are only used for the opening bid or response.
And announcing NT ranges is the only way to eliminate the French defense.
#27
Posted 2012-August-25, 07:14
#28
Posted 2012-August-25, 14:54
I got back into duplicate in England, where (at the time, at least) exchanging cards with your opps at the beginning of the round (and hence not being in possession of them again until the end of the round) was de rigeur. I wish it were so here, but it's not.
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
#29
Posted 2012-August-25, 16:47
blackshoe, on 2012-August-25, 14:54, said:
Where I am now (New England), people mostly seem to have cards (at least in the better club games), but they're usually in an ancient convention card holder on which the "clear" plastic has clouded to near opacity, with any remaining legible spots covered with stickers. (Sometimes NABC souvenir stickers, but sometimes just unicorns and suchlike.) They're sometimes even on the table, though usually with a coffee and a doughnut perched on top.
I do find it interesting and at least marginally hopefuly that when I place a freshly printed card on the table by the bidding box where RHO can easily see it, RHO will sometimes actually have a look, and at least occasionally that has caused the opponents cards to appear and/or be debeveraged without my even having to ask!
That's my little part to try and change the culture at my local clubs bit by bit. (Or maybe I just like tilting at windmills. At least I've learned to stop asking where the alert strips are in ACBL-land bidding boxes!)
#30
Posted 2012-August-27, 14:27
Quantumcat, on 2012-August-25, 07:14, said:
Other RAs have other decisions, but in the ACBL, Announcements are limited to:
- Range of NT (and one should have one's defences committed to memory, right?)
- red-suit transfers to majors after NT openings, overcalls, and relevant (i.e. after SAF club openings) rebids (same deal, no?)
- potential "short, non-forcing" 1m openings (with, with the exception of the "is it 4=4=3=2" question, again you have discussed your defences)
- "forcing" or "semi-forcing" (forcing in theory, passable by flat minimum) artificial 1NT responses to 1M bids (and you have your defences to F, SF, or NF, right?)
Certainly in general your argument holds (although finding the things you need to discuss a defence against on the ACBL card is less easy than most others); but the Announcement system is designed for a) very very common situations that b) won't be forgotten and c) need to be distinguished from "real Alerts". Or the NT range, which frankly is there because the WeaSeL defence works against any range if you don't stop it.
#31
Posted 2012-August-28, 04:32
Quantumcat, on 2012-August-25, 07:14, said:
Do you feel that there shouldn't be alerts either, so long as you are in possession of the opponents' CC?
#32
Posted 2012-August-28, 18:54
Vampyr, on 2012-August-28, 04:32, said:
No. You cannot contain a whole system in a CC. The CC is just for the basic things.
You are not supposed to memorise the CC either, only gain an appreciation of the opponent's basic methods so you are prepared. E.g. the opponents may play Precision, and you haven't discussed what you do over a Precision 1♣. Having the thing announced isn't going to help you if you didn't discuss it before play started - the opponents aren't going to let you have a quick chat in the middle of a hand.
Announcements are only for the most basic of things, which you can get from glancing at the front page of a CC, not for alerts. It's announcements I am against, because it's your own responsibility to have an idea of your opponent's basic system before you start play.
Alerts are so that an opponent knows the bid has an unusual meaning. He might ask, or if it is something basic [e.g. 1NT (2♦)] he might look at the CC rather than ask. Alerts are essential, because if the opponent does not play your system, he can't possibly have any idea that it is different from what it would mean if he had that auction.
#33
Posted 2012-August-29, 04:49
I do not understand why anyone would think that it is more important to protect players who can't remember their own system than to protect players who can't remember their opponents system.
#34
Posted 2012-August-29, 11:14
Why should people be allowed to get away with WeaSeL vs NT because "I know they played something weird, can't remember if it was a weak or variable NT, or something else"? How about the "how short" diamond ask where the answer is invariably "fewer than you have"?
Why should I have to remember whether you're playing a Forcing NT or not? or whether your Forcing NT is passable?
That's the ACBL. In the EBU, why should I have to worry if 2♦ Alerted is because it's natural (but not the "approved" kind of natural), or because it's Benjamin, or Multi, or actually something odd? Why, with 6, should I have to put the UI out that I have a lot of diamonds, or remember what it was 10 boards into a 12-board match?
"Things opponents should note" is great for working on defences; that's not the only reason for Announcements (as I said, if you need to discuss defences to Announced calls, either you're grossly underprepared or they shouldn't have been Announcements).
Announcements are, in fact, Alerts; just ones that in the view of the RA are either so common that "everybody" plays them (especially in situations where there are reasonably common "real Alerts"), or situations where WeaSeL works so well and so invisibly that we want to circumvent it, or in cases where it's important to have it Alerted, but insanely unlikely that partner won't remember (EBU's "Announce the strength of natural 2-openings, Alert Artificial ones", the ACBL's "could be short")
#35
Posted 2012-August-29, 11:45
Vampyr, on 2012-August-24, 19:27, said:
Stayman and major suit transfers are extremely popular. Therefore alerting them is pointless as you are unlikely to ask; asking every time would be tedious. But the time these 2-level suit bids are something other than Stayman or simple transfers, you need to know.
Similarly with weak twos. I would like to know if my opponents; 2-bids are weak, intermediate or strong, and especially if they are two-suited (this one is alerted while the others are anniunced), which is probably more popular than the latter two options combined.
Don't forget that announcements are only used for the opening bid or response.
And announcing NT ranges is the only way to eliminate the French defense.
I agree for almost all of these, but I find the procedure works really badly for 2C openings. Apart from whatever proportion of the EBU plays the right forms of strong club, almost every 2C opening I've ever come across in the EBU is either:
a) Artificial, various strong hands
b) Artificial; various strong hands, or a weak 2 in diamonds*
The problem is that these are both alerted, so if (as is common in many clubs I've played in) there's no convention card obvious, you need to ask about every such opening, even though very few have the weak option. I know the arguments against making an exception to an easily understood rule, and I don't in general like the US-style approach of "It's alertable if it's not what we expect you to play", but the alerting system works *so* badly here that it seems worth it to me.
A much more frivolous aside:
On the subject of "short diamond" "how short?", I'd really like convention cards to be marked with expected diamond length and expected club length, as well as minimum. This is a problem at beginning-of-round time; If 1D is equally likely to show clubs or diamonds, I would like to agree with my partner to play our "nebulous minor" defence; if 1D on average shows considerably longer diamonds than clubs, we will treat it as natural; in between we'll make some arbitrary decision. It's generally hard to get opponents to understand in time what we're asking, but I realise that this is a wish which will never be granted except possibly in clubs entirely composed of maths students...
*another aside: this is my second favourite convention to find on a card whose basic system was announced as "Benji Acol". My favourite was a weak-only multi 2N in the minors, although that card also had multi 2C and multi 2D.