Posted 2011-October-07, 02:57
The EBU has in general made clear that if you are using apparently strong 2 bids, even with meanings that are technically strong, but which are not hands of strength and quality, it is incumbent on you to give proper disclosure. In my view, proper disclosure was therefore not given. The reasons for this conclusion are quite long, and follow below.
There are two separate issues here, and we must be careful not to confuse them.
One is, what are the permitted conventions, and
The other is, the explanation given to a bid.
The term "strong" has two uses in the EBU, one in defining what is a permitted convention, and the other is in making certain explanations, especially the announcement "strong" that must be used for certain bids.
The EBU permits certain multiple meaning 2-bids subject to the requirement that they fit into certain option groups, where a number of the options are defined as "strong", in which case they must conform to the EBU's definition of "strong". In particular, at Level 3, (and from context that is likely where we are at) a 2-bid is not allowed to have a mix of strong and other meanings, except in the case of the multi 2D. So in the case of a 2C bid, if it has a strong meaning, then all the other meanings must be strong in the EBU sense. And in the case of the multi-2D, you have to construct it from options which are weak and strong, and the strong meanings have to be strong in the EBU sense. So even if the word "strong" is not used, you are entitled to assume that it is at least strong in the EBU sense.
Where players are using single-suited 2-bids, they must be announced as "strong", "intermediate" or "weak". And in this context "strong" has the same meaning. And also I think it is reasonable to assume that if a player uses the term "strong", in relation to a 2-bid, he is using it in the EBU-defined sense, otherwise no one knows what he meant.
Now the player here did not say "strong", he said "game-forcing", which doesn't necessarily imply "strong" in the EBU sense. But he is using the bid with one strong option (23+ balanced), therefore all the options must be strong in the EBU sense. So, although he didnt' actually say "strong", we can be confident that when he says "game forcing", it must be at least "strong" in the EBU sense.
Now this hand is quite clearly "strong" in the EBU sense, it is Rule of 25 and has 9 clearcut tricks. You could take an ace away and it would still be "strong" in the EBU sense, so it is an A beyond minimally strong. But this is something of a red herring. We know it must be "strong", and it is "strong", even though the player didn't use the term. But players are still required to give proper disclosure of the types of strong hand they use a bid for. Because many players do not open hands like this using "strong" calls.
So the ultimate question is, did the use of the term "game forcing" suitably describe the kinds of hands so as to reveal to the opponents he might use it for this type of hand.
Now there is a back-story here which affects how people look at these things. The traditional "Acol 2" bid, whether a natural Acol strong 2, or used as part of a multi-meaning 2-bid like Benjamin 2C, has a traditional description which is often abbreviated to "8 playing tricks". But the proper understanding of an Acol 2 is "a hand of strength and quality with substantial defence", an implication which means that partner can usually judge that if the ops are bidding high they are sacrificing, not competing. But soe people are so used to the abbreviated description, and ill-informed of the intentions, abuse the Acol 2 bid to include the kind of hand shown here, a hand with high trick-taking ability, but little defence. We then had the argument, when it came to explanations, along the lines "All I said was 8 playing tricks, I never said it was a hand of strength and quality," whereas others would say "but it is implied, because that is the short code for the trad Acol 2." So the EBU came along and defined the term strong, so that if people wished to claim they were playing a "strong 2", or using a strong option in a Benjamin 2-bid, then it had at least to be "strong". But, nevertheless, people using it for hands that are not of strength and quality are required to give proper disclosure.
Now the player here did not even say "Acol 2-type", nor "8-playing tricks", what he said was "game-forcing". We know it must be strong, and it is, nevertheless it is not a hand of "strength and quality". Do we read into the term "game-forcing" an implication that this must be a "hand of strength and quality" with substantial defence? Or can the player reasonably claim he never said that. Clearly the ops read that into it, but was it reasonable for them to do so? It has been pointed out that "23+ or game forcing" is a traditional abbreviated description of the trad Acol 2C bid. I therefore think it is incumbent on the player to give proper disclosure if they are using the bid in a way that admits hands that are purely offensive. Using a traditional formulation that is used to describe the traditional Acol 2C fails to give that disclosure.