When you KNOW partner will hesitate EBU
#1
Posted 2017-July-25, 15:13
e.g. 4♥ - P - P - ?
And you bid 4NT hoping that partner guesses what your call means. i.e. no partnership understanding - and you KNOW it. The auction continues:-
4♥ - P - P - 4NT
P -(BIT) 5♠ - P -?
Are you allowed to assume that partner's response is the 'correct' response to your call based on his hand and the BIT was him working out what your call meant?
One of the following 2 hands was opposite, the other was on your right hand side
♠ T97653
♥ J95
♦ 985
♣ 8
And
♠ 8
♥ AQ
♦ AJ74
♣ KJT752
Note that under EBU rules neither the 4NT call, nor the 5♠ call should be alerted.
2nd Question
Are you allowed to make a new call (here 6♣ - natural) to give partner a chance to clarify his bid?
Get the facts. No matter what people say, get the facts from both sides BEFORE you make a ruling or leave the table.
Remember - just because a TD is called for one possible infraction, it does not mean that there are no others.
In a judgement case - always refer to other TDs and discuss the situation until they agree your decision is correct.
The hardest rulings are inevitably as a result of failure of being called at the correct time. ALWAYS penalize both sides if this happens.
#2
Posted 2017-July-25, 16:09
So absent any other agreement I would expect partner to having selected spades, and I see little reason to let the bit change that.
#3
Posted 2017-July-26, 00:20
pran, on 2017-July-25, 16:09, said:
It must have been at least 60 years ago I should think - most pairs during my lifetime use another call here to ask partner to select one of the other 3 suits, one that does not preclude a 4♠ advance.
On the OP itself, it seems to me that 6♣ is more likely to clear up the situation for partner than 5NT so you would need a good reason to select the former after the BIT.
#4
Posted 2017-July-26, 02:34
weejonnie, on 2017-July-25, 15:13, said:
If there is a "correct" response to a call about which you have no agreement, then surely that is what you MUST assume partner has made once there has been a BIT? (Without the BIT you can assume what you like, of course, but it still seems sensible to assume partner has made the correct call. If you don't want to assume this then I suggest it was probably a bad idea to make the undiscussed call in the first place.)
#5
Posted 2017-July-26, 03:13
Zelandakh, on 2017-July-26, 00:20, said:
On the OP itself, it seems to me that 6♣ is more likely to clear up the situation for partner than 5NT so you would need a good reason to select the former after the BIT.
If I were to rule in a situation like this I would need to have clarified:
1: the agreed understaneing (if any) of the 4NT bid,
2: the bidder's intention with this bid
3: the agreed understanding on each of the available alternative calls, namely: Double, 4♠, 5♣, 5♦ and 5♥.
Only then can I draw any conclusion about the impact of partner's bit.
#6
Posted 2017-July-26, 14:58
weejonnie, on 2017-July-25, 15:13, said:
e.g. 4♥ - P - P - ?
And you bid 4NT hoping that partner guesses what your call means. i.e. no partnership understanding - and you KNOW it. The auction continues:-
4♥ - P - P - 4NT
P -(BIT) 5♠ - P -?
<snip>
Note that under EBU rules neither the 4NT call, nor the 5♠ call should be alerted.
Not correct. Unless partner believes that the only plausible meaning for 4NT is natural, the 4NT call should be alerted under the EBU rules. Artificial (or potentially artificial) calls on the first round of the auction have to be alerted, even if they are above the level of 3NT.
#7
Posted 2017-July-26, 15:26
jallerton, on 2017-July-26, 14:58, said:
"calls" should be "suit bids". Blue Book 4B4(a) - either 2016 or 2017.
4NT is not alertable, different rules apply to doubles.
"Robin Barker is a mathematician. ... All highly skilled in their respective fields and clearly accomplished bridge players."
#8
Posted 2017-July-26, 15:29
jallerton, on 2017-July-26, 14:58, said:
That is incorrect - it says artificial Suit bids - and I am amazed that so many experienced directors have failed to spot this.
Get the facts. No matter what people say, get the facts from both sides BEFORE you make a ruling or leave the table.
Remember - just because a TD is called for one possible infraction, it does not mean that there are no others.
In a judgement case - always refer to other TDs and discuss the situation until they agree your decision is correct.
The hardest rulings are inevitably as a result of failure of being called at the correct time. ALWAYS penalize both sides if this happens.
#11
Posted 2017-July-27, 04:50
♠ T97653
♥ J95
♦ 985
♣ 8
And this yours:
♠ 8
♥ AQ
♦ AJ74
♣ KJT752
Your LHO has started with 4♥, partner and RHO pass and you bid 4NT. LHO passes and partner tanks and bids 5♠.
Whether you have an explicit agreement on the 4NT call, is not the point. The point is, whether your partner can make a reasonable guess, based on experience and/or other agreements. Is 2NT 'unusual', asking for partner's best minor? Anyway, in this case I would assume that partner has spades. If a bid is undiscussed and not obviously artificial, it should be natural. Bidding 6♣ might therefore be based on the BIT, you assuming that partner didn't understand 4NT.
I'm afraid that this isn't a very good example. Firstly, it's a gamble that partner might have long diamonds. If I would have made a call, it would have been 5♣. But most likely I would have passed. Secondly, why didn't RHO double 5♠? He has at least 14 HCP and a singleton or no hearts and some spades with honors. Thirdly, bidding 6♣ is asking for a disaster. If the opps don't double, it's their own fault and not a matter for the TD.
#12
Posted 2017-July-27, 09:57
sanst, on 2017-July-27, 04:50, said:
♠ T97653
♥ J95
♦ 985
♣ 8
And this yours:
♠ 8
♥ AQ
♦ AJ74
♣ KJT752
Your LHO has started with 4♥, partner and RHO pass and you bid 4NT. LHO passes and partner tanks and bids 5♠.
Whether you have an explicit agreement on the 4NT call, is not the point. The point is, whether your partner can make a reasonable guess, based on experience and/or other agreements. Is 2NT 'unusual', asking for partner's best minor? Anyway, in this case I would assume that partner has spades. If a bid is undiscussed and not obviously artificial, it should be natural. Bidding 6♣ might therefore be based on the BIT, you assuming that partner didn't understand 4NT.
I'm afraid that this isn't a very good example. Firstly, it's a gamble that partner might have long diamonds. If I would have made a call, it would have been 5♣. But most likely I would have passed. Secondly, why didn't RHO double 5♠? He has at least 14 HCP and a singleton or no hearts and some spades with honors. Thirdly, bidding 6♣ is asking for a disaster. If the opps don't double, it's their own fault and not a matter for the TD.
Actually your hand is
♠AKQJ42
♥-
♦106
♣AQ964
The hand with the singleton spade is the one opposite you - however I included both as the other one could have given a 5♠ response.
Get the facts. No matter what people say, get the facts from both sides BEFORE you make a ruling or leave the table.
Remember - just because a TD is called for one possible infraction, it does not mean that there are no others.
In a judgement case - always refer to other TDs and discuss the situation until they agree your decision is correct.
The hardest rulings are inevitably as a result of failure of being called at the correct time. ALWAYS penalize both sides if this happens.
#13
Posted 2017-July-27, 16:02
RMB1, on 2017-July-26, 15:26, said:
4NT is not alertable, different rules apply to doubles.
weejonnie, on 2017-July-26, 15:29, said:
Well, I stand corrected and must apologise. This is an exception to an exception, and quite a bizarre one to have.
Most players on the national circuit refer to this rule as "no alerting above 3NT unless it's on the first round of the auction", then any subsequent discussion refers to what "the first round of the auction/bidding" should be interpreted.
#14
Posted 2017-July-29, 13:46
Taking the general case where we make a bid which we know is undiscussed, and partner hesitates before calling:
It's AI that the bid is not discussed. What we learn from partner's hesitation is that:
(1) He doesn't know what the bid means.
(2) He would not choose the same action opposite all meanings of the bid.
Are we constrained by UI?
(1) doesn't tell us anything new, so it doesn't suggest one action over another, and does not constrain our actions.
(2) is UI, but it won't usually suggest one action over another. If it does, then yes our actions are constrained by the UI.
On the next round, are allowed to make a bid that hedges against his having misunderstood? Usually yes, because we're acting on the AI, not on UI.
#15
Posted 2017-July-30, 04:17
#16
Posted 2017-July-30, 15:34
weejonnie, on 2017-July-25, 15:13, said:
Are you allowed to assume that partner's response is the 'correct' response to your call based on his hand and the BIT was him working out what your call meant? One of the following 2 hands was opposite, the other was on your right hand side
♠ T 9 7 6 5 3 ♥ J 9 5 ♦ 9 8 5 ♣ 8 And
♠ 8 ♥ A Q ♦ A J 7 4 ♣ K J T 7 5 2
Note that under EBU rules neither the 4NT call, nor the 5♠ call should be alerted.
2nd Question
Are you allowed to make a new call (here 6♣ - natural) to give partner a chance to clarify his bid?
Possible meanings of 4N, in order of sense, include ...
- UNT For minors e.g. ♠ x ♥ x ♦ Q J x x x x ♣ A K J x x
- NAT. To play e.g. ♠ A K ♥ A ♦ A K Q x x x x ♣ Q x x
- ART, Strong 2-suiter e.g. ♠ A K J x x x ♥ - ♦ A K x x x x ♣ x But 5♥ might be clearer.
- T/O, Strong 3-suiter e.g. ♠ A K Q x ♥ - ♦ A K Q x ♣ Q J x x x. But X might be clearer.
- ART, Ace-asking (old fashioned Blackwood) e.g. ♠ A K Q x x x x x ♥ x ♦ A ♣ K Q
And you bid 4NT hoping that partner guesses what your call means. i.e. no partnership understanding - and you KNOW it. The auction continues:- 4♥ - P - P - 4NT-
P -(BIT) 5♠ - P -?