P_Marlowe, on Nov 6 2006, 11:23 AM, said:
Mr. Dodgy, on Nov 5 2006, 04:47 PM, said:
<snip>
FWIW I decided, after some consideration, the same as the posters here thus far: result stands. I did advise South to explain his agreements in future even for such misbids.
<snip>
Hi,
the main problem is, that we are talking about self-alerts,
i.e. if I give an alert, which does not fit the actual hand I
hold, things will get messy.
South did the right thing, he did protect the opponents and
thats it.
With kind regards
Marlowe
Although I fully understand that your heart is in the right place, failing to follow the rules of the game is something that should not be condoned.
Bridge is a game with full disclosure of your
methods, not of your cards.
I would not admonish South here but I would remind him that it is necessary to disclose your agreements and not the fact you have misbid.
As to alerting opponents when I don't have the hand, this is just bridge. For example, suppose I play Walsh responses to 1
♣ openers and so bid a 4-card major before a 5-card minor. This makes a 1
♥/1
♠ response alertable (in WBF and BBO terms, perhaps not in ACBL and other jurisdictions).
If I only alert the 1
♥ response when I have a 5-card minor, then I am telling the opposition my hand and not my methods. Perhaps this is how people wish to play, but the problem with taking the rules into your own hands is that there are always edge cases where you will make a subjective judgement about the alert. This is why most sponsoring organisations have rules in this area.
Paul