negative inferences alertable? with an example
#1
Posted 2012-June-15, 08:51
1♠ - 2NT! - 4♠ - all pass.
Seems pretty simple to me. After the auction, RHO (one of the strong players at the club) informed us that 4♠ must be alerted because it carries additional information: no shortness and minimum values. We had a brief talk about it; I thought that since the bid is natural and a signoff, there is no need to alert it. He maintained that the denial of shortness makes the call alertable.
Note, this was an entirely friendly situation, nobody was seeking a ruling or getting their feathers up, so we did not call the director. On the next hand, after LHO opened and my partner passed, I (being a wiseguy) alerted and explained that pass denies holding 20+ points. RHO rolled his eyes a little, probably justifiably, but my point was that almost every bid denies something.
So which is it? And in general, what types of negative inferences are alertable?
-gwnn
#3
Posted 2012-June-15, 09:12
barmar, on 2012-June-15, 09:05, said:
Sorry, ACBL.
-gwnn
#4
Posted 2012-June-15, 09:40
The answer to the question is that what negative inferences are alertable depends on what the jurisdiction defines. Now, I do not know where, but on RGB I have been told that the ACBL have actually said that negative inferences are not alertable.
To compare, the EBU says
Quote
5 E 1 Passes and bids
Unless it is announceable (see 5 C and 5 D), a pass or bid must be alerted if
(a) it is not natural; or
(b) it is natural but has a potentially unexpected meaning.
So, if it is below 4♣ [bids above 3NT are not alertable after the opening bid] then a negative inference makes a bid alertable if that makes it a "potentially unexpected meaning". That would be one that the opponents are really unlikely to expect.
Suppose you play
1♠ - 2NT [Jacoby] - 3♣ as any hand with no side suit and at least six spades, and you always bid a side suit if you have one [3♦, 3♥, 4♣]. Is 3♠ alertable in the EBU?
In my view, yes, because while natural it clearly denies more than five spades, and that is a meaning that would not be expected.
But would it be alertable in the ACBL? Perhaps not!
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#5
Posted 2012-June-15, 10:06
bluejak, on 2012-June-15, 09:40, said:
1♠ - 2NT [Jacoby] - 3♣ as any hand with no side suit and at least six spades, and you always bid a side suit if you have one [3♦, 3♥, 4♣]. Is 3♠ alertable in the EBU?
Just as a matter of courisity, if this is your set of rebids after 2NT, is it still appropriate to call 2NT Jacoby? The standard set of rebids is for the 3 level rebids other than the agreed suit to show shortness. At what point of modifying the rebids does 2NT stop being Jacoby and become a game forcing 2NT (not Jacoby)?
#6
Posted 2012-June-15, 10:19
jh51, on 2012-June-15, 10:06, said:
To resolve issues like this, I never use convention names when answering questions at the table. So for me, it would always be "game forcing spade raise" no matter what follow-ups are in use.
-gwnn
#7
Posted 2012-June-15, 10:21
ACBL Alert Procedures said:
Once the auction has progressed to the point that the opening bidder has had the opportunity to make a second call, conventional calls at the four level or higher are not Alerted until the auction is over.
These DELAYED ALERTS are REQUIRED to be made by the DECLARING side before the opening lead. The DEFENDERS are REQUIRED to Alert declarer AFTER the OPENING LEAD but BEFORE declarer makes a play from dummy (Alerting before the lead is turned face-up and the dummy is spread is best).
The declaring side must make their Delayed Alerts before the opening lead. Defenders wait until they have made the opening lead before they explain calls requiring a Delayed Alert. As with normal Alerts, the partner of the person making the Alertable call is the person who makes the Delayed Alert and explains the agreement.
EXAMPLES:
1♥-P-1♠-P 4♦ (splinter)
There is no Alert at the time for the 4 bid.
After the auction, the 1♠ bidder must Alert and explain as required the meaning of the call.
#8
Posted 2012-June-15, 10:27
-gwnn
#9
Posted 2012-June-15, 10:29
ACBL Alert Definitions said:
#10
Posted 2012-June-15, 11:04
billw55, on 2012-June-15, 08:51, said:
That pass denies 20+ points is expected so it should not be alerted. But if you mean that it could be as strong as 19, then it is probably alertable.
The expected meaning of a pass in the opening seat is something like "0-11, but not a nice distributional 10/11, nor a hand suitable for a normal preempt". If your style deviates significantly from that, for example if you open a weak two with any 0-10 count with a 5-card suit, then maybe the pass becomes alertable.
#11
Posted 2012-June-15, 15:22
billw55, on 2012-June-15, 10:27, said:
The ACBL Alert Procedure calls this a "treatment":
Quote
Although it doesn't specifically mention implications about distributions of other suits (i.e. no shortness), I think this can be considered part of "general strength". Treatments are only alertable if they have unexpected meanings (despite their popularity, the document specifically mentions weak jump shifts as being "unexpected" -- the problem with listing specific agreements is that a document can easily become out of date).
But if you don't agree with my interpretation, there's also this clause:
Quote
(Highlighting from the original.) So the question is whether this agreement about rebids after Jacoby is common enough that it has become expected. The examples they give are 1♥-1♠ promising 5 spades when playing Flannery, and bypassing diamonds to bid a major over 1♣; I'd argue that Jacoby 2NT with its standard rebids is at least as popular as Flannery, so the negative inferences are not alertable.
However, since this bid is above 3NT and is opener's second bid, if it's alertable it would be a delayed alert. Since there's no UI from a delayed alert, there's little reason NOT to clarify it after the auction is over.
#12
Posted 2012-June-16, 00:33
#13
Posted 2012-June-16, 07:45
jh51, on 2012-June-15, 10:06, said:
Convention names are never appropriate.