matmat, on Jun 7 2007, 11:14 PM, said:
kenrexford, on Jun 7 2007, 04:21 PM, said:
I'm not sure how that reference also offended you.
To re-state the facts:
1. We had an undiscussed auction (surely others do as well).
2. My partner, who is a professional player, knows very well how my mind thinks about undiscussed auctions.
3. That person made a call that seems bizarre to people who find my general thinking bizarre but that seemed to him to be somethin I would understand.
4. He was right -- I understood his bid without discussion. Hence, we had a good partnership. I don't think that is a problem.
5. I did not alert his call, because...
(a.) it is not alertable,
(b.) you are not supposed to alert calls above 3NT that late in the auction anyway -- as it might help partner more than the opponents, and
(c.) the alert policy is in effect for this very situation -- if I alerted 4♠ as RKCB with their suit as the focus suit, this would tell partner what my bids mean and help us more than them.
6. the bid was VERY strange and thus not likely to be made without an explanation requested when explanation matters.
hmmm... say i sit down to play with someone and have no discussion regarding system. I notice after playing a few sessions with them that they interfere over opps 1NT with, say, Hamilton. We never discussed these bids, they're not part of our agreements. so is it okay for me not to alert his calls? at what point do observed tendencies become tacit agreements? at which point do they become alertable? it seems like a totally gray area and you can either skirt the law or ethically disclose observations. i dunno... the actions above smell fishy.
There is a WILD difference between an undiscussed Hamilton auction coming up with a supposed pick-up partner being fielded and then not alerted, and a very strange bid in the middle of a completitive auction being made by one partner of an established partnership at the four-level.
The wild difference is that the Alert Policy very specifically says that you are not supposed to alert any late action above 3NT. The reason for this policy is most effectively shown by the actual auction. Your side has shown slam interest in a competitive auction. The guy to your left made a preempt in the middle of this, his partner previously passing. Now, RHO sticks in a strange 4
♠ call, which makes NO sense.
You could ask what that means, but your guess is that it shows some sort of heart raise and is funny. You do not care. So, you do not ask at this point -- maybe later. However, LHO now pipes in with an alert. NOW, you suspect that this alert has informed RHO that LHO believes 4
♠ to be some sort of specialized bid. Sure enough, when you now ask, LHO informs you that 4
♠ asked how many Aces and club honors (our suit) LHO holds. But for this alert, I'm sure RHO would not have a clue that LHO took his 4
♠ for THAT!?!?! But, we will never know...
This is not a tacit agreement, in the way you suggest. It is "tacit" in the sense of "not alerted immediately" because the Rules, designed to protect the other side, bar you from alerting this call and explaining this call unless asked by the opponents, because a weird 4
♠ call, out of the blue, alerts itself by its very act of being bid. It is "tacit" in the sense of not being described in advance on the convention card (tacit as not discussed between the partners themselves even) because this never comes up and the CC is too small to put every possible auction against every possible opposition technique on the card.
I'm not sure what the "observed tendencies" idea is, either. Keep in mind, again, that this is not just a call that need not be alerted, it is a call that you are specifically not supposed to alert. It seems like the suggestion is for these types of alerts:
"ALERT!!!"
("Yes?")
"Partner has a tendency to expect me to understand bids in undiscussed situations as more likely slam-approach than game-approach (or game-before-slam)."
"Partner is tilted in mindset toward the artificial more often than most (or he believes that unknowns are natural if they could be natural)."
"Partner is of the [aces-first, traditional Italian, Gitelman new Italian, Rexfordian] cuebidding style."
Or, it gets even better:
"Partner's 4
♣ call probably says nothing about clubs -- she just wants me to pick something other than 3NT, my guess."
"Partner's 4
♥ call suggests that he never understands my Gerber calls."
This seems so incredibly simple. My partner and I did not discuss every possible auction. However, we have discussed enough to understand each other in undiscussed auction, even to the point of the "weird" being readable even when undiscussed. This came up, tested our partnership, and we passed the test. We alerted the opponents ONLY when we were finally alllowed to alert them. The bids in question were OBVIOUSLY not natural and by themselves would suggest a possible interest in inquiring without the need for an alert. Had we alerted immediately, we would have broken the Rules of the game, so we did not.
"Gibberish in, gibberish out. A trial judge, three sets of lawyers, and now three appellate judges cannot agree on what this law means. And we ask police officers, prosecutors, defense lawyers, and citizens to enforce or abide by it? The legislature continues to write unreadable statutes. Gibberish should not be enforced as law."
-P.J. Painter.