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we are all intelligent people here, aren't we?

#41 User is offline   blackshoe 

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Posted 2011-December-20, 19:06

View Postjillybean, on 2011-December-20, 12:20, said:

Why not interrupt? It's too late once the question is asked, you are left wondering how the player on lead will interpret the UI and hoping the director gets it right if a call is needed.

Does a player become dummy at the end of the auction or after the opening lead?


Quote

Laws Chapter 1, Definitions: Dummy: 1) Declarer’s partner. He becomes dummy when the opening lead is faced.


View Postmycroft, on 2011-December-20, 17:20, said:

My answer as prospective declarer is "I'll explain after the lead." If a similar question now comes from the leader, I will call the TD, and after explaining what happened, answer the question when she tells me to. If a lead-that-seems-suggested by the UI hits the table, I call the TD as well and explain ("Hello. I'm sure there's no problem, but ... Just wanted to make sure we all know." "Everyone" knows that means "How did you find that lead?", but in case it is actually the no-LA lead,...)

Most often, the question from the wrong side is innocent - she thinks she's on lead.

In the original case, I would do the same thing (answer at the correct time, i.e. now), and if I got a feeling that communication was made and received, I would call the TD, again "just in case there's a problem." But I trust the TDs I play under (mostly, anyway) to do the "you know, this is a bad habit/can't win/puts your partner under some really nasty obligations" dance, so I don't have to.

The ones that ask before the last pass, when it's a) clear that they aren't coming in, and b) partner's going to be on lead, rub me the wrong way. They're certainly legally allowed to do that, but why not do it *after* the lead? ("Partner doesn't lead face down." "Okay, ask before playing after dummy. You still have all your rights.")

View PostJLOGIC, on 2011-December-20, 18:03, said:

Are they allowed to do that? I was under the impression that you could not ask randomly (ie, if it won't affect your bid), and thus asking at that point in time implies the answer will affect your bid, and that you are not allowed to ask intentionally misleading questions. I have no idea if this is true or not.

But again, usually it doesn't matter and I think all of these director calls or lecturing the opps will just lead to unpleasantness, and slow down the game, and generally will be for no purpose. If someone asks out of turn about a specific artificial bid, and then their partner makes an unusual lead of that suit, then go ahead and call the director, but the other 95 % of the time who cares? I feel like the forums often forget that bridge is a social game, it's not all about everyone following correct protocol all the time even if there is no damage. Have some fun and do your best to make sure that others have a good time also!


These are the relevant laws. There's more to 20F1 and 20F2, but nothing really relevant to this question.

Quote

Law 20F1: During the auction and before the final pass, any player may request, but only at his own turn to call, an explanation of the opponents’ prior auction.
Law 20F2: After the final pass and throughout the play period, either defender at his own turn to play may request an explanation of the opposing auction.
Law 20F3: Under F1 and F2 above, a player may ask concerning a single call, but Law 16B1 may apply.
Law 20G1: it is improper to ask a question solely for partner’s benefit.
Law 73B1: Partners shall not communicate by means such as the manner in which calls or plays are made, extraneous remarks or gestures, questions asked or not asked of the opponents or alerts and explanations given or not given to them.
Law 73D2: A player may not attempt to mislead an opponent by means of a remark or a gesture, by the haste or hesitancy of a call or play (as in hesitating before playing a singleton), the manner in which a call or play is made or by any purposeful deviation from correct procedure.

Law 16B1 deals with UI from partner. For purposes of Law 73 a question is included in "remark or gesture".

Regarding the wording of the laws, the Introduction to the Laws has this to say:

Quote

Established usage has been retained in regard to “may” do (failure to do it is not wrong), “does” (establishes correct procedure without suggesting that the violation be penalized), “should” do (failure to do it is an infraction jeopardizing the infractor’s rights but not often penalized), “shall” do (a violation will incur a procedural penalty more often than not), “must” do (the strongest word, a serious matter indeed). Again “must not” is the strongest prohibition, “shall not” is strong but “may not” is stronger — just short of “must not.”

So the prohibitions in the quoted parts of Law 73, particularly the second one, are pretty serious.

I have to confess that the most frequent response I get to "please explain your auction" (which is the way I was taught to ask questions) begins "well, partner opened 1, and then I bid..." :blink: The second most frequent is "huh?" The third most frequent is "Director!" Once, the director arrived and asked me "which call were you interested in?" :o

I would not suggest that anyone ever lecture their opponents about anything to do with the game. That's what the director's for, and at least if you call the TD you won't have to deal with an escalating argument.

BTW the proper procedure in the case of potential UI from an inappropriately timed question is the same as the procedure in the case of potential UI from a break in tempo: you attempt to establish agreement that UI may have been passed, and if the opponents disagree, they are supposed to call the TD. Then, if you think you may have been damaged by use of UI, you call the TD after the hand is over.

Yes, bridge is supposed to be fun, and if in your judgement a TD call is unnecessary, just don't call attention to their irregularity. B-)
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#42 User is offline   Cascade 

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Posted 2011-December-20, 19:09

View PostJLOGIC, on 2011-December-20, 18:03, said:

Are they allowed to do that? I was under the impression that you could not ask randomly (ie, if it won't affect your bid), and thus asking at that point in time implies the answer will affect your bid, and that you are not allowed to ask intentionally misleading questions. I have no idea if this is true or not.

But again, usually it doesn't matter and I think all of these director calls or lecturing the opps will just lead to unpleasantness, and slow down the game, and generally will be for no purpose. If someone asks out of turn about a specific artificial bid, and then their partner makes an unusual lead of that suit, then go ahead and call the director, but the other 95 % of the time who cares? I feel like the forums often forget that bridge is a social game, it's not all about everyone following correct protocol all the time even if there is no damage. Have some fun and do your best to make sure that others have a good time also!


Yes they are allowed.

The problem is that some people repeatedly do things like this and it is not much fun playing against them.
Wayne Burrows

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#43 User is offline   Cascade 

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Posted 2011-December-20, 19:13

View Postblackshoe, on 2011-December-20, 19:06, said:

Quote

Law 73B1: Partners shall not communicate by means such as the manner in which calls or plays are made, extraneous remarks or gestures, questions asked or not asked of the opponents or alerts and explanations given or not given to them.
Law 73D2: A player may not attempt to mislead an opponent by means of a remark or a gesture, by the haste or hesitancy of a call or play (as in hesitating before playing a singleton), the manner in which a call or play is made or by any purposeful deviation from correct procedure.
...

So the prohibitions in the quoted parts of Law 73, particularly the second one, are pretty serious.


Nevertheless I am a little surprised by the use of "shall not" and "may not" in these laws. I would have thought that the strongest possible message would be given regarding these matters.
Wayne Burrows

I believe that the USA currently hold only the World Championship For People Who Still Bid Like Your Auntie Gladys - dburn
dunno how to play 4 card majors - JLOGIC
True but I know Standard American and what better reason could I have for playing Precision? - Hideous Hog
Bidding is an estimation of probabilities SJ Simon

#44 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2011-December-21, 01:00

View PostJLOGIC, on 2011-December-20, 18:03, said:

Are they allowed to do that? I was under the impression that you could not ask randomly (ie, if it won't affect your bid), and thus asking at that point in time implies the answer will affect your bid, and that you are not allowed to ask intentionally misleading questions. I have no idea if this is true or not.

You're not allowed to mislead the opponents or ask solely for partner's benefit. But other than that, you're allowed to ask.

The question of whether you can ask if it won't affect your bid comes up often. The conundrum that this raises is that the fact that you DON'T ask may pass UI that you have a hand that's unaffected by what the opponent has. So any "rule" for when you ask potentially raises UI issues.

But the only way out of this trap is to ask always or never (even if you need to know); the former would be annoying, while the latter is clearly not intended (the Laws specifically say that you're allowed to ask). So we live with the small amount of UI as the compromise. And the result of this is that accepted recommendation not to ask if you don't need to know.

#45 User is offline   Trinidad 

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Posted 2011-December-21, 03:20

View Postbarmar, on 2011-December-21, 01:00, said:

And the result of this is that accepted recommendation not to ask if you don't need to know.

That depends on your location.

In most places, the accepted recommendation is to ask when you need to know and to ask frequently (i.e. less than always) when you don´t need to know. On top of that, it is considered "not done" to pass an alerted skip bid without asking, since it implies that you are not interested in bidding regardless of the meaning.

Rik
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#46 User is offline   JLOGIC 

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Posted 2011-December-21, 04:06

View Postbarmar, on 2011-December-21, 01:00, said:

You're not allowed to mislead the opponents or ask solely for partner's benefit. But other than that, you're allowed to ask.



Ergo I would submit that asking in passout seat when you are only allowed to ask if the explanation will influence your bid when you never intend to bid as misleading to the opps. Or is that false? Technically speaking of course. My understanding is you are not allowed to ask in passout if the answer will not influence your bid (aka, if you will never bid). Is this true or false? If true, asking when you will never bid is misleading to your opps.
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#47 User is offline   Cyberyeti 

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Posted 2011-December-21, 07:33

View PostJLOGIC, on 2011-December-21, 04:06, said:

Ergo I would submit that asking in passout seat when you are only allowed to ask if the explanation will influence your bid when you never intend to bid as misleading to the opps. Or is that false? Technically speaking of course. My understanding is you are not allowed to ask in passout if the answer will not influence your bid (aka, if you will never bid). Is this true or false? If true, asking when you will never bid is misleading to your opps.

I think this should be the case but suspect it isn't.

I played against a good player in a national event in an auction where spades were bid and alerted twice by my partner on the way to 3N by me. The player on my right asked about both alerted bids, and his partner led a spade so I wheeled the man in. Turned out the spade lead was completely natural and the asker had 8x. He apparently ALWAYS asks about any alerted bid at his turn. I hate this practice as it can create UI problems for the other side where none need to exist in circumstances where a bid is obviously conventional (or beyond 3N) but it's not precisely clear what it is, but apparently it's completely legal.

I suspect you can do the same thing if you always ask about the auction before partner leads.
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#48 User is offline   Trinidad 

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Posted 2011-December-21, 08:06

You may hate the practice of always asking alerted bids, but it is the recommended practice in many places. The UI problems that it creates are minor (certainly when compared to the UI problems it prevents) since the first -and most revealing- UI already went over the table in the form of the alert.

I will not make any call, unless I know what the opponents' auction means. (This doesn't necessarily mean that I will ask all the time. Often I will know it from the convention card or because the auction has come up before.) That is my rule and there are only two exceptions:
- I will not ask if the opponents are in an artificial relay sequence and it seems clear that we don't want to be in the auction. In principle I would ask, since I might want to make a lead directing double at some point, but asking each round would be consuming too much time. If I then do want to make a lead directing double, I will ask and I will give my partner a ton of UI. I will take my loss. I consider this a favor to my opponents. (This, BTW, is a typical situation where I will ask when I am in the pass out seat. My partner will ask anyway before he leads, but it may just be possible that I want to do something other than pass. By asking at that point I will not give the UI that I was going to pass regardless of the meaning of the auction.)
- If I think that the opponents are clueless, I won't ask if it doesn't effect my bidding. I will give them every opportunity to get the auction right or wrong without UI.

Rik
I want my opponents to leave my table with a smile on their face and without matchpoints on their score card - in that order.
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#49 User is offline   EricK 

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Posted 2011-December-21, 13:16

It doesn't strike me as fair that when a pair who plays a "frequent alert" system is up against a pair who plays a system which is basically natural, the former gets the whole auction time to think about the hand, and plan the defence etc, whereas the latter, if they don't ask about alerted bids as they go along, have to wait until the end, and have to try to assimilate all the information from the auction in one go.
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#50 User is offline   mycroft 

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Posted 2011-December-21, 13:53

Thanks blackshoe for the recital of laws, but there was one missed:

Quote

Law 41B:Before the opening lead is faced, the leaders partner and the presumed declarer (but not the presumed dummy) each may require a review of the auction or request an explanation of an opponents call (see Law 20F2 and 20F3). Declarer or either defender may, at his first turn to play a card, require a review of the auction; this right expires when he plays a card. The defenders (subject to Law 16) and the declarer retain the right to request explanations throughout the play period, each at his own turn to play.(footnotes omitted)


As it's the one that allows "questions, partner?" "yeah, what was..." I figured it should be there (and in fact, when I went through your list, I twigged for a second saying "oh, so we can't actually ask before the lead is faced? I wonder how we managed to codify that illegality...")

So, to shorten Justin's query:
  • You are allowed to ask at your turn to call, even if you're going to pass it out no matter what.
  • questions asked pass UI to partner.
  • in the passout (and presumed declarer's RHO) seat, the UI from questions about a particular call are obvious -
  • and that by waiting until the clarification period (between the last pass and the faced opening lead) or one's play to T1, the UI won't influence the opening lead.
  • Partner's "magically" finding the lead of the suit asked about by passout *is* going to trigger a TD call, and now you've put partner's brilliant lead-finding skills into the hands of the TD's "LA judgement". This one's pretty much no-win.


To shorten even more (in the ACBL, at least): you're allowed to ask at your turn to call. There are times when it's much safer to ask at a different time. Before passing the auction out to partner's opening lead is #1 on that list (unless, of course, you would do something given an expected explanation of the call - in that case, partner's restricted if you end up passing, but oh well).
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#51 User is offline   mycroft 

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Posted 2011-December-21, 14:02

As far as misleading the opponents, players may not "attempt to mislead". They may attempt - in fact, it is "desire[able]" for them - to keep an unvarying manner.

If a player "always asks about alerted calls", then that's what he does - and varying that due to circumstances is more of a violation than not varying it. The player is not attempting to mislead - he always asks, so he asks here too. It's not his fault if you assume that his habit means something it would for lots of other people.

If they always ask about Alerted calls in my strong club auctions, I get a bit peeved, but you know, it is their right. With luck, the explanations don't confuse them more than not having them :-)

(If a player always asks about all calls, it's going to be suggested to him that maybe he should develop a better habit...)
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#52 User is offline   Cascade 

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Posted 2011-December-21, 15:51

Always asking can cause a time problem.

And while it might mask a UI I would bet that with most partner's I could tell when they were interested and when not even if they always asked after just a few sessions. And I don't think this is one of my strengths players who are more astute in these matters could probably read their partner much sooner that I could.
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I believe that the USA currently hold only the World Championship For People Who Still Bid Like Your Auntie Gladys - dburn
dunno how to play 4 card majors - JLOGIC
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#53 User is offline   CSGibson 

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Posted 2011-December-21, 16:53

Frankly, in the ACBL at least, playing a frequent alert system is a significant advantage if you are playing opponents who don't ask about every call. Either an opponent is at high risk at transmitting UI by asking about system calls when they might matter, or they risk a lead directing X without asking, which might be a significant disadvantage to their side either by being re-wrapped, or because one of the opponents has shown shortness in the suit and this X will help them evaluate HCP distribution with no upside to the doubler. Because of the burden that frequent alert systems place on the opponents, I would be very tolerant of opponents who always ask about alerts when playing against such systems in non-screen environments.

This, by the way, is my opinion despite playing a frequent alert system (or perhaps because of my experience in such a system).
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#54 User is offline   JLOGIC 

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Posted 2011-December-21, 17:08

"Always ask" seems like a good solution in theory but something that would significantly slow down the game and be annoying for little theoretical gain. Exactly like waiting at least 10 seconds over a skip.

BTW, I can just imagine it going 2N p 3S alert, someone asking, and then passing, and having reasonable spades and their partner leading a spade vs 3N with a LA. They say "but I always ask" and that is considered self serving and ignored without evidence. I think always askers should write it down on their card that they always ask to protect themselves. That also allows us to police them when they do NOT ask. I have seen many time people who say "but I always ask" not ask. The problem is, it is unclear what the UI is when this happens if any, or if their partner will be barred from doing anything because of it, but obviously it is a big issue.
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#55 User is offline   Trinidad 

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Posted 2011-December-21, 17:09

View PostCascade, on 2011-December-21, 15:51, said:

And while it might mask a UI I would bet that with most partner's I could tell when they were interested and when not even if they always asked after just a few sessions. And I don't think this is one of my strengths players who are more astute in these matters could probably read their partner much sooner that I could.

I know that there are players who don't care about the meaning of opponents' bidding. I, however, like to know what is going on in the auction. During the auction, I start to visualize the possible distributions around the table. I add the HCP in my hand to the points that the "declarer to be" has shown. I visualize who could have what honors and check how they are placed relative to mine. If I have thought things over during the auction I have an easier time defending.

Therefore, it is easy for me to act as if I am interested in the answer, even if I am not contemplating a bid. This simply is because I actually am interested.

Rik
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#56 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2011-December-22, 14:22

If the opponents are playing a relay system, you're still probably better off waiting until the end. They'll often give you a complete picture like "Partner showed 5 spades, 4 hearts, with the club ace and 2 other controls." If you ask along the way, the intermediate bids often have multiple possible meanings, so you're best off waiting until later bids have narrowed things down.

#57 User is offline   gnasher 

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Posted 2011-December-22, 14:46

View Postbarmar, on 2011-December-22, 14:22, said:

If the opponents are playing a relay system, you're still probably better off waiting until the end. They'll often give you a complete picture like "Partner showed 5 spades, 4 hearts, with the club ace and 2 other controls." If you ask along the way, the intermediate bids often have multiple possible meanings, so you're best off waiting until later bids have narrowed things down.


Except that often this isn't the complete picture. Most such methods allow the relayer to do something other than relay. To understand the auction properly, you have to know what was shown at each stage, and what else the relayer could have done at each stage.
... that would still not be conclusive proof, before someone wants to explain that to me as well as if I was a 5 year-old. - gwnn
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#58 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2011-December-22, 16:02

I'm not sure I've ever heard an explanation of a relay go into more detail than "He's asking for more information about my hand." I think most of the alternatives are just natural bids. The inference that he wants more information before setting trumps is available to both sides.

#59 User is offline   gnasher 

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Posted 2011-December-23, 06:38

Consider these two made-up examples:

1-2       5 spades / relay
2-2NT     11-15, exacly 5 spades, exactly 4 cards in a red suit / relay (but could sign off in 3NT instead)
3-3NT     4 diamonds / signoff

1-2       5 spades / relay
2-2NT     5+ spades, 4+ diamonds / relay
3-3NT     11-15, exactly 5-4 / signoff

In the former case we know that responder would have done something different opposite a four-card heart suit. If you only ask what opener has shown, you're not getting all the information to which you're entitled.
... that would still not be conclusive proof, before someone wants to explain that to me as well as if I was a 5 year-old. - gwnn
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#60 User is offline   Trinidad 

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Posted 2011-December-23, 09:15

I fully agree with gnasher.

In the cases of relays, I ask afterwards, but I do want to know what each individual bid showed. Once the opponents understand this, this can be very quick: They point to the bidding card and explain each individual bid:
- 11-15, 5+ spades
- heart side suit
- 5=4=3=1
- MIN
- 3 controls (K doesn't count)
- AKQ or no spade control
- heart control and diamond control (therefore, no control in spades), no control in clubs, so he has A and K or the K and A
- With that knowledge I decided to bid...

And in my experience relay pairs are very good at full disclosure.

Another thing that you do need to take into account is that relayers sometimes intentionally ask for more information than they need. They do this to mask the reason for their sign-off.

Rik
I want my opponents to leave my table with a smile on their face and without matchpoints on their score card - in that order.
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