should I alert when playing unnusually natural?
#1
Posted 2012-June-05, 14:15
Right now we have 5 conventions:
-first bid = double asks for suit
-stayman
-transfer (only to majors)
-regular blackwood
-2♣ opening is strong.
This means that he will bid things like:
4th suit naturally
Raise 1♠ to 4♠ with 16 HCP
overcall a 5 card 1♥ opening with 2♥ when he has hearts.
#2
Posted 2012-June-05, 14:44
-- Bertrand Russell
#3
Posted 2012-June-05, 14:52
Sort of like a penalty double of an opening bid in direct seat. No one would expect a direct double to be for penalties.
#4
Posted 2012-June-05, 14:59
#5
Posted 2012-June-05, 16:53
Fluffy, on 2012-June-05, 14:59, said:
This is an area which leaves me a bit confused at times as well - when you play a conventional bid which is different to what the rest of the room is playing, but which is also alertable in "standard" bridge.
At the club where I usually I play Jacoby 2NT is fairly unusual, but most people recognise it and know the standard follow-ups. So if our auction begins 1H-2NT-3C, we alert the last two bids.
Most opponents expect the 3C bid to show shortage in clubs, when in fact we use it to show a minimum opening hand.
Many opponents won't ask about the alert, and if responder simply bids 4H over that and the auction ends, is declarer obliged to now re-alert the alert or something to make sure the opponents know what the bid showed? We do play with complete system cards but at one-or-two boards per table matchpoint events, opponents rarely bother to look at them.
#6
Posted 2012-June-05, 17:01
squealydan, on 2012-June-05, 16:53, said:
Nope. If you alerted the bid and your opponents didn't care, it's 100% their problem. Even if it's because the alert regulations are bonkers. (Example of the latter case: in Germany 2♥ as a weak 2 in hearts is alertable. I once became declarer one the auction 2♥-p-p-p, my partner having alerted because 2♥ showed 4-4 or better in the majors. Opponents never thought to ask.)
-- Bertrand Russell
#7
Posted 2012-June-05, 17:02
squealydan, on 2012-June-05, 16:53, said:
At the club where I usually I play Jacoby 2NT is fairly unusual, but most people recognise it and know the standard follow-ups. So if our auction begins 1H-2NT-3C, we alert the last two bids.
Most opponents expect the 3C bid to show shortage in clubs, when in fact we use it to show a minimum opening hand.
Many opponents won't ask about the alert, and if responder simply bids 4H over that and the auction ends, is declarer obliged to now re-alert the alert or something to make sure the opponents know what the bid showed? We do play with complete system cards but at one-or-two boards per table matchpoint events, opponents rarely bother to look at them.
I have many similar examples I wonder about. For example, for us 1♠ - 2nt (alert) - 3♥ (alert) would rarely get an ask, most assuming it's heart shortness, where for us it's significant extras + club shortness. I want to say "special alert", but of course am not able to. After the auction, at the time we'd disclose delayed alerts, assuming we've overbid and bought it, I tell the opps that some of the alertable calls probably don't mean what they think they mean, so they might want to ask.
Particularly amusing to me are our 1♥ - 2nt (no alert) auctions, and our 1m - 2m (no alert) auctions. It would save time if I just alerted them as natural and forcing (in the first case) and as a simple raise, NF (in the second case), as there is nearly always an ask about what the opps are sure is a missed alert.
#8
Posted 2012-June-05, 17:04
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#9
Posted 2012-June-06, 05:21
mgoetze, on 2012-June-05, 17:01, said:
I have better examples from Germany. My partner and I play Rubensohl (transfers) after a 1NT opening and overcall. Noone has yet asked the meaning of such a bid. Another classic example from Germany is the auction 1NT - (X) - XX, which is never allowed to be alerted. Naturally this is part of a runout system over our weak NT but since almost everyone round here plays strong I would suspect most have never even considered the possibility. Certainly noone has ever asked, even the times when I (wrongly) alerted it.
#10
Posted 2012-June-06, 05:30
Zelandakh, on 2012-June-06, 05:21, said:
The example I gave was from a very low-level event (notwithstanding the fact it awarded quintuple masterpoints). I'm sure if you ever bothered to attend a serious bridge event here in Germany you would be surprised how many things people ask about.
-- Bertrand Russell
#11
Posted 2012-June-06, 09:06
#12
Posted 2012-June-06, 14:01
Of course, if they don't bother to ask, assuming they already know, that's their problem.
#13
Posted 2012-June-07, 09:04
jh51, on 2012-June-06, 14:01, said:
Even if you ARE playing standard Jacoby, you should still explain it as an artificial game forcing raise. I think most jurisdictions say that simply giving the name of a convention is not a sufficient explanation.
But in the above stories, it sounded like the opponents didn't ask about either 2NT or the followup.
#14
Posted 2012-June-07, 10:04
Merseyside England UK
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#15
Posted 2012-June-10, 09:55
Nobody would persue an adjustement if 2 beginners bid this natural way and didn't alert I think, so maybe my partnership shouldn't be different than that.