mikeh, on 2015-July-15, 18:25, said:
My guess, from the examples given, is that you are playing, at the club level, a method that would not be permitted in most international play, and if it were permitted, it would be on the basis that you first afforded all opponents several weeks warning including a very detailed convention card, and you'd probably have to have your system notes vetted by the organizers.
It is permitted, we play twice a year at an open tournement in our city, Pula, Croatia. Nobody has ever complained, since it is a pretty simple method. Here in Europe, when an opening bid shows a strain, even if technically is artificial (being a transfer), is not considered Highly Unusual.
mikeh, on 2015-July-15, 18:25, said:
Your methods are such that even the most experienced players would want some opportunity to discuss defences: your 1 bids seem not only to be artificial but also forcing.
Our 1 bids are simply two-under transfers (of course forcing, as is forcing any artificial bid), so any general agreement about dealing with transfers will do. I can tell you that most average polish pairs which come to play in Pula, when we open e.g. 1
♦, showing spades, use 1
♠ as take-out without any problem. Anyway, in the front of our convention card we propose this defense for the opponents, and this is the only additional agreement they may need after any opening by our side.
mikeh, on 2015-July-15, 18:25, said:
I find it particularly revealing that you are annoyed at the opps who simply want an opportunity to play on a slightly more level playing field than you think is fair. You are using an unusual, heavily artificial bidding method, based on an unusual metric for strength, while playing against opponents with whose methods you are, I suspect, far more familiar than they can possibly be with yours, and you are annoyed at them for asking too many questions?
I am not annoyed in the least. As I said, I simply find illogical being asked what shows an asking bid. And, as someone noted in the posts above, it may even not be correct to give to the opponents a non-agreed information. I personally would not like that the my opponents instructs me how to make inferences. Regarding our "heavily artificial bidding method", it is so simple that could be described in a few sentences, without ever mentioning a suit, since it is all built upon one general rule. But surely it is unusual, since most people play quite complex systems, which they happily call natural (e.g. here in Croatia the club opening promises 2 club cards, while our club opening promises 5 of them).
mikeh, on 2015-July-15, 18:25, said:
I am sure that your method gains you a lot of advantages at the club level, and even more sure that most, if not all, of those advantages stem from the inability of the opps to understand or counter your methods.....maybe because they lack the ability to do so even of afforded time, but certainly because they don't have time, nor sufficient information.
Wrong again! For one thing, we are, for many years by now, getting very poor results. And since we play a long time this method with the same people, they are quite well acquainted with it. My partner is an eternal beginner, so the very same opponent which harass him with what I consider irregular questions, a very good player, often understands my bid better then my partner (e.g. in the last example I gave, my partner didn't understand the invitational nature of my 3
♦ bid, so he left me there).
mikeh, on 2015-July-15, 18:25, said:
I often rail against the ACBL, which organization stifles most experimentation, but, especially at the club level, they have a point, and that point is made ever the more valid by attitudes such as yours seems to be. My view...play anything you want, but make damn sure that you give the opps whatever information they lawfully request. And if you find yourselves falling back on 'undiscussed' or 'no agreement' more than once a session, make a ***** agreement, or stop playing the method until you have one. If I were a club owner, I would ban you from using the method if you consistently failed to answer or provided non-answers.
With this post I simply wanted to ascertain whether it is lawfull to request information which has not been agreed upon by a partnership. Here I learned it is. At least, it is generally considered desirable, so I am going to conform, without any annoyances. What is the problem? Maybe that the ACBL and similar organizations think that only experts like to devise bidding systems, obviously abstruse, and besides, with the only aim of confusing the opponents. To me, this attitude is not in the spirit of the game.