3.5 bid
#21
Posted 2010-October-28, 16:22
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
#22
Posted 2010-October-28, 18:35
I have not been directing that long, Ed, but I have been playing against unethical players that long.
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#23
Posted 2010-October-28, 18:38
bluejak, on 2010-October-28, 18:35, said:
Fair enough.
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
#24
Posted 2010-October-29, 02:57
blackshoe, on 2010-October-28, 16:22, said:
This is very true, but around here it's a pretty common agreement. At pairs particularly, surely it must be correct not to allow opps to play 4♥ undoubled when you have 21 points and them 19 and it appears both sides have most of the points in their long suits. The usual result will be down 1 or 2 when you're making 140 (or possibly down 3 when you're making 170). If they make 4♥ you're probably in for a poor board anyway.
Cancelling the 4♠ bid is easy, but what do you do as the director if the pair say that it is impossible for the auction to rest in 4♥ undoubled ? and must be either 4♥X or 4♠ by system. This is not an agreement that's likely to sit on their convention card. Is this another case where a director tells the pair they don't play their own system as seems to happen quite a lot ?
#25
Posted 2010-October-29, 03:26
Cyberyeti, on 2010-October-29, 02:57, said:
Wht not? If you have clear agreements about forcing pass situations, I would have thought it was very much in your interests to ensure this was recorded on your convention card in order to provide evidence in just this sort of situation.
#26
Posted 2010-October-29, 03:34
Cyberyeti, on 2010-October-29, 02:57, said:
It would happen less if pairs with surprising, unlikely agreements made sure they were adequately recorded on their system cards or in their notes.
London UK
#27
Posted 2010-October-29, 05:28
gordontd, on 2010-October-29, 03:34, said:
Do you take your notes with you to the club or record the really detailed agreements on the "front of scorecard" convention cards often used there.
#28
Posted 2010-October-29, 05:44
So my reply stands unchanged in the scenario given to us by the OP. If the scenario was different it is true my answer might be different.
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#29
Posted 2010-October-29, 06:48
Cyberyeti, on 2010-October-29, 05:28, said:
I would if I were going to cite unusual agreements in support of decisions to make calls suggested by UI.
London UK
#31
Posted 2010-October-29, 10:30
Merseyside England UK
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Currently at home
Visiting IBLF from time to time
<webjak666@gmail.com>
#32
Posted 2010-October-30, 11:22
Rik
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the new discoveries, is not “Eureka!” (I found it!), but “That’s funny…” – Isaac Asimov
The only reason God did not put "Thou shalt mind thine own business" in the Ten Commandments was that He thought that it was too obvious to need stating. - Kenberg
#33
Posted 2010-October-31, 16:37
pran, on 2010-October-28, 10:57, said:
In a situation like this I would consult other fellow directors if available, but my basic guts feeling is that East must now pass and leave the decision to West.
If you don't carry out a poll, how do you determine what the logical alternatives are? Polling fellow directors is only useful if the fellow directors are considered to be peers of the player who bid 3♠.
#34
Posted 2010-November-01, 07:05
As to knowing partner is short, a pretty good-natured opponent swore at my partner and myself. We took it as a compliment, which it was clearly intended as. I had overcalled in hearts, partner had raised, and the good player, holding four hearts, had gone on to four spades, as he admitted, partly because he knew partner was short in hearts.
We quickly cashed three heart tricks, leaving the thirteenth in the dummy.
Merseyside England UK
EBL TD
Currently at home
Visiting IBLF from time to time
<webjak666@gmail.com>
#35
Posted 2010-November-05, 04:24
(in my partnership this hand is a GF minisplinter, so 3♠ would be a huge underbid)
#36
Posted 2010-November-05, 06:03
Reminds me of a hand from my youth:
I held
x
xxxx
AJ9xxx
xx
1c on my right at all red so stuck in a comedy 1d bid, the auction went:
1c-1d-1s-3d
4s-p* p 5d
AP
my pass was quite slow: I was playing with my dad and he doesnt like making preemptive raises that might go off, so i felt sac might be right at MP. Anyway the director got called took a look at my dads hand and wandered off to make a ruling. Dummy hit with
Axx
-
KQxxx
AQxxx
The director came back to say no change obviously, and sheepishly admitted in the bar later that most of the players he had polled had wondered if after the obvious "slow play" of 3d the hesitation barred you from bidding slam.
The LOL questioned the director wuite a lot - they didnt seem to think this was a "completely obvious" 5d (at least!) bid. Pretty funny. I enjoy playing with my dad - its never boring
EDIT: forgot my dads comment: "Its hard to bid intelligently when you overcall on such rubbish". Classic.
#38
Posted 2010-November-06, 05:03
bluejak, on 2010-October-28, 06:58, said:
Do they really?
I was given the hand as a problem without knowing about the hesitation (and without knowing it was a ruling question). I doubled, and thought it obvious.
Next I was asked what the slow pass demonstrably suggested, and I said bidding 4S.
So what would I do as an ethical player? I would double.
If I pass in tempo, it is extremely likely that hestitating partner is going to bid 4S. Whether or not one agrees with arguments about pass being forcing, it's still pretty likely that partner isn't going to pass out 4S.
(on the original hand that led to the ruling, isn't there going to be a high percentage of a 4S contract with opener bidding 4S when responder passes in tempo?)
#39
Posted 2010-November-06, 16:15
And sealed the Law by vote,
It little matters what they thought -
We hang for what they wrote.
#40
Posted 2010-November-06, 18:34
I do not understand the argument about partner bidding 4♠ most of the time. How does that affect whether I bid 4♠ for him?
Merseyside England UK
EBL TD
Currently at home
Visiting IBLF from time to time
<webjak666@gmail.com>