gnasher, on Apr 18 2010, 11:26 PM, said:
Is West more likely to ask about an alerted 2♠ opening when he has an 11-count than when he has a 5-count?
Definitely. I have been playing competitive bridge in England for 45 years and I know from experience that this is a fact.
At least, assuming the query was from England, which seems likely.
aguahombre, on Apr 18 2010, 11:36 PM, said:
any rules which disallow asking about an alerted call are truly from another planet
Which is why there are no such rules here.
aguahombre, on Apr 19 2010, 12:25 AM, said:
sorry...i should have said rules which allow penalizing the question about an alerted call.
. . . . . .
And Don't bother picking on the word "penalize". Because that is what apparently happened.
Oh, we do not penalise, we merely apply the UI Laws.
Any suggestion that we suspend the UI Laws just because people want to ask questions is also completely bonkers. Either we allow people to gain an advantage from their partners' action apart from the calls and plays, or we do not. My vote is for the latter: gaining unfair advantage from partner's questions is just not the way I want the game to be played and is illegal.
helene_t, on Apr 19 2010, 12:46 AM, said:
Anyway, I agree with AH. Absent evidence to the contrary, asking about an alerted call is normal and does not carry UI.
There is evidence to the contrary. My 45 years' experience of tournament bridge means that I can tell an opponent's strength of hand from his questions or absence of question in many cases. If I can, so can his partner. Furthermore, the worries raised and advice given by an L&EC of before my time was based on similar evidence.
W . N . E . S
. . . . . P 2♠/A
Q/P P 3♥ P
P . P
2♠ was alerted
West asked then passed
2♠ = ♠+other 5-4, 5-9 HCP
3H= NS +140