lamford, on 2013-April-03, 04:37, said:
I think such players are not following the chief object which is to obtain a higher score than the opponent(s).
Then I think you are wilfully misunderstanding what I said.
lamford, on 2013-April-03, 04:37, said:
You are never going to get a real bridge auction, because somebody has opened out of turn. Indeed I could not enter the actual auction using BBO software.
This is now the measure of a real bridge auction?
lamford, on 2013-April-03, 04:37, said:
There are some players who waive a revoke, who tell people to pick up penalty cards and allow misbids to be corrected. It is nothing to do with a real bridge auction. They are just being magnanimous.
They are not the people I am talking about, and that is not a strategy I ever advise.
lamford, on 2013-April-03, 04:37, said:
I think that the correct action is to have an agreement regarding the 1NT bid out of turn. Best, I think, is to allow it with 0-7 points, and to disallow it with 8+. If it is corrected to 3NT, you should double with 12+ and pass with 8-11. That way when the Kingites bid 3NT after it is not accepted, they will usually be doubled when it is going off. I think that the Pass is alertable, but the refusal to accept the bid out of turn is not. I think that some RAs do not allow agreements over the opponents' infractions, but perhaps some one here will clarify that.
The Orange Book says:
Quote
Under Law 40B3 (d) a pair is allowed to vary, by prior agreement, its
understandings during the auction and play consequent on an irregularity by
either side, except that following its own insufficient bid a partnership may not
change by prior agreement the meaning of a replacement call so that it is brought
within the criteria of Law 27B1 (b).
lamford, on 2013-April-03, 04:37, said:
I would be disappointed if any teammate accepted a bid out of turn, just to get "a real bridge auction".
You'd be glad if they did it and you got the normal 4S-1 contract rather than the abnormal 3NT=.