Posted 2015-March-24, 18:03
I'm sure that all the penalty doubles of 3M and 4M on the third round of a competitive auction are all Alerted.
But seriously, (and yes, I know it's defined), what does "takeout" mean as referred to doubles? "Penalty?"
4♠-X. "Takeout, but partner's going to pass more often than not." Alertable? (No, but that's because of the Blue book definition of takeout).
1NT-X. "Penalty, but really 'same values', and over your 10-12..." Alertable? Well, yes, but not because it's not "Penalty", it's because the Blue Book explicitly defines it as "penalty, but Alertable".
2NT (minors)-X. Yeah, it's penalty, but not for NT... Alertable?
Our meta-agreement is that undefined doubles at the 3 level are "do something intelligent". Alertable? Yes - again, because a double that "wishes to compete" isn't in fact a takeout double because of an example.
I think I could fairly easily learn to Alert EBU doubles, and I don't think it's all that difficult. But it's not as easy as people mention, because "takeout, according to the Blue Book and its examples" and "penalty, according to the Blue Book and its examples" are not easy things to understand. The big caveat here is "Doubles are also Alertable if they convey a potentially unexpected meaning in addition to take-out or penalties", and that is not easy.
I'm not trying to say that this may not be the best Double Alert regulation; it may be one of the simplest; I'm just saying that due to the crazy range of doubles and definitions, even the best isn't "easy".
I guess I'm an idiot.
When I go to sea, don't fear for me, Fear For The Storm -- Birdie and the Swansong (tSCoSI)