Disclosing rigid style
#1
Posted 2014-February-11, 19:29
During system discussion partner advised me privately that it only ever leads a major at trick1 v. NT, which may be a short suit angling for my length.
I took the statement as likely hyperbole. What would it lead with C:KQJT9 and a side Ace against uncontested auction 1S-2H-2S-3H-3S-3N-P?
I would also ask you for the purpose of this thread to disregard the merits of the policy.
OK, whether it was being entirely literal is beside the point, I feel, which is that it had a tendency to lead a major considerably more frequently than would be expected without being prewarned (even acknowledging that perhaps that tendency is generally rife anyway).
From an ethical standpoint, what are your disclosure obligations here? However moronic the policy, its success rate may be inflated by a greater appreciation of its existence by partner than by opponents from whom the policy is concealed. And that seems to me unfair and probably illegal. On the other hand, partner no doubt was trying not so much to form a partnership agreement as rather to educate me as to its perception of best bridge strategy (however warped that perception) and there is no requirement to extend bridge tutorials also to opponents.
Thoughts?
#2
Posted 2014-February-11, 19:38
#3
Posted 2014-February-11, 19:58
CSGibson, on 2014-February-11, 19:38, said:
#4
Posted 2014-February-12, 04:33
The normal way to disclose leading methods on BBO is for the opponents to ask you and you to answer. If an opponent asks you what your leads are, you should tell them about this.
There's no requirement on BBO to have a convention card, but if you have one you should make sure it's correct. So, you should disclose it on your card too.
#5
Posted 2014-February-12, 10:51
Same thing imo as I don't believe any player who says always or never.
What is baby oil made of?
#6
Posted 2014-February-12, 11:18
gnasher, on 2014-February-12, 04:33, said:
The normal way to disclose leading methods on BBO is for the opponents to ask you and you to answer. If an opponent asks you what your leads are, you should tell them about this.
There's no requirement on BBO to have a convention card, but if you have one you should make sure it's correct. So, you should disclose it on your card too.
I agree with this in general, but I have a hard time with the implications of taking this to its logical conclusion, bearing in mind (a) that implicit agreements developed over time playing together are just as much partnership agreements as explicit partnership agreements and (b) aren't both members of a partnership supposed to be playing the same thing?
I know one or two of my partners have different preferences between alternative leads - for example over the likelihood of a trump lead, or the relative merits of leading (from) an unsupported A or K. Similarly, and closer to the OP, there may be different tendencies in terms of the frequency of passive vs active leads against 3NT. There is certainly no partnership agreement here - in some cases I can imagine quite strong disagreements over the relative merits of different leads. But there is nevertheless some degree of recognition of what partner is more likely to do.
is it enough simply to say these are differences in degree not absolutes so there is nothing to disclose? What about recognised differences in the percentage of the time we will deliberately not follow nominal agreements such as deciding it would be less misleading on this occasion to lead the middle card from 10xx even though our standard agreement is to treat the 10 as an honour and lead low? Or the likelihood of deciding this is an occasion on which it is better to lead an honour from KQxx against NT even though our normal agreement would be to lead 4th highest?
#7
Posted 2014-February-12, 11:24
ggwhiz, on 2014-February-12, 10:51, said:
Same thing imo as I don't believe any player who says always or never.
There are two parts to choosing an opening lead: choosing the suit and choosing the card within the suit. You seem to be saying that only the latter is disclosable. This is incorrect. A pair which with some frequency chooses a different suit than most players would choose is required to disclose that tendency. Failure to do so is either ignorance or willful concealment. As for players who speak in absolutes, whether you choose to believe them or not is entirely up to you. I'll grant they're probably exaggerating, at least, but that's only "probably", it's not "certainly".
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
#8
Posted 2014-February-12, 13:12
Can anyone show me a single case where that has ever been contested successfully? Or has anyone ever heard of a single case where the director made them disclose that information?
#9
Posted 2014-February-12, 16:12
CSGibson, on 2014-February-12, 13:12, said:
Can anyone show me a single case where that has ever been contested successfully? Or has anyone ever heard of a single case where the director made them disclose that information?
So declarer asks me if we lead away from Kings it's a loaded question since I'm looking at my hand and know where it is. If I say less than 10% and pard has the King I'm ethically boxed into slime ball territory as well as if I say often and am looking at it.
I'm just telling them 4th best, standard and if I'm pressed I guess I have to say 50-50 but it's an improper question and not subject to disclosure imo.
What is baby oil made of?
#10
Posted 2014-February-12, 16:34
ggwhiz, on 2014-February-12, 16:12, said:
I'm just telling them 4th best, standard and if I'm pressed I guess I have to say 50-50 but it's an improper question and not subject to disclosure imo.
It's really easy to come up with a scenario where opponents ask a "loaded" question, and then say it's "improper". That's well and good, but suppose they ask a "not loaded" question - are you still going to say it's "not subject to disclosure"?
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
#11
Posted 2014-February-12, 16:39
#12
Posted 2014-February-12, 17:15
blackshoe, on 2014-February-12, 16:34, said:
I answered to specific circumstances as in mid play of the hand. Of course if they ask about style before I've got my cards in hand they will get an honest answer.
What is baby oil made of?
#13
Posted 2014-February-12, 20:17
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
#14
Posted 2014-February-13, 02:39
WellSpyder, on 2014-February-12, 11:18, said:
is it enough simply to say these are differences in degree not absolutes so there is nothing to disclose?
No, they're implicit understandings, and disclosable under the rules. A tendency to lead aggressively is just as disclosable as a tendency to overcall aggressively.
Quote
Those are disclosable too. If you might lead two different cards from the same holding, your convention card should say so.
#15
Posted 2014-February-13, 03:29
gnasher, on 2014-February-13, 02:39, said:
So if asked "do you have a tendency to lead aggressively or passively?" am I supposed to answer with respect to our tendency as a partnership, or my (my partner's?) tendency as an individual? Is it even permitted to have different implicit understandings about such things according to which partner is on lead?
#16
Posted 2014-February-13, 03:55
WellSpyder, on 2014-February-13, 03:29, said:
You are of course supposed to disclose your de facto partnership understanding. If you know that your p tend to lead passively and your p knows that you tend to lead aggressively then opps are entitled to know exactly that.
Legal or not (I certainly hope it is legal), partners have different tendencies. It's not like you can get away with concealing a partnership understanding on the basis of "Oh I thought it was an illegal agreement so we weren't allowed to disclose it".
#17
Posted 2014-February-13, 10:54
#18
Posted 2014-February-13, 12:05
blackshoe, on 2014-February-12, 20:17, said:
I agree as long as they are not as specific as asking about a missing king when I know where it is. That's how I interpreted the scenario up thread.
Indeed I've played against opponents who I respect a great deal who will often ask your defensive "style" say, before the opening lead on the 1st hand of a match and I learned to give a good enough answer that they didn't need to ask again later.
They would tend to ask about bidding "style" as needed for various auctions, pre-empts etc. but always phrased and timed the question in a way that I never felt threatened into giving the show away.
What is baby oil made of?
#19
Posted 2014-February-14, 02:53
WellSpyder, on 2014-February-13, 03:29, said:
You're supposed to answer with respect to your personal knowledge of your partner's tendencies.
#20
Posted 2014-February-14, 03:25
barmar, on 2014-February-13, 10:54, said:
Doesn't individual judgement have to be disclosed? If I am playing with Shogi and he leads a a spot card against a suit contract, it can systematically be MUD, top of doubleton, or lowest away from an honour. However he almost never leads away from a king or an ace so it really means "small from a suit lead by Q, J or T". The latter is our de facto agreement.
Now it is quite normal rarely to lead away from an ace against a suit contract but not leading away from a king is a personal style thing which I am away of and will make use of. So declarer should be aware of it as well.
It is a bit more tricky if our partnership understanding is that "p is not very good so you can't really draw any conclusion from his failure to lead a trump when the auction screams for a trump lead". Shogi and I used to have a footnote saying "Helene sometimes forgets to give correct count", and when playing with a novice I have sometimes informed opps about p's novice status because my partner was afraid of TD calls in case she mixed something up and opps felt misinformed. But my experience is that such disclaimers work badly. Most opps seem not to care and some find it annoying.