diana_eva, on 2014-November-22, 02:55, said:
True, but what if the players with SEF don't have any such doubts and believe it's clear what 2D means? I've seen this happen too, not only with the strong 2D from SEF or Forum-D players, but also with 1C strong or 2C (not strong) from precision players.
If you aren't sure whether a call is alertable but it's
artificial (promising neither length nor strength in the bid-suit) then I think you should alert it. Even if you start alerting take-out doubles, it won't do any harm
scarletv, on 2014-November-22, 03:23, said:
For Forum D players 2♦ is still alertable. I would clearly not accept a missing alert from German players. But I would have to accept a strong but natural 2♦, 2♥ or 2♠ opening from them without alert.
IMO, you should alert
natural bids of a strength that opponents might not expect (e.g. probably, almost any 2-bid).
blackshoe, on 2014-November-22, 03:46, said:
Assuming, for the sake of argument, that 2
♦ would not require an alert in France, French players unfamiliar with other jurisdictions would have no reason to expect that it would require an alert anywhere else. So it seems a bit harsh to ding them for "failure to alert" when there's nothing to tell them what to alert other than "anything you think might require an alert". That's likely to lead sooner or later to "heck with it, I'm going to alert
everything". OTOH, players to whom, in their experience, a particular meaning is unusual will be rightly aggrieved if they mess something up because they weren't told that meaning. I don't think there's a good answer to this dilemma.
With players of different ability and nationality, it would be hard to formulate specific rules. "If you aren't sure, then you should alert" is clear enough for practical purposes. There's no harm in over-alerting on BBO because alerts are simply explanations that only opponents can see. IMO, the game would be nearly dead, were it not for on-line bridge with it's simpler, saner, fairer rules. Finally..
- BBO has standard editable cards for most systems, including 2/1, Precision, and SEF.
- BBO full-disclosure cards automatically present relevant alerts and explanations.
- Magical
West: Sweden Expert
North + South: France Experts Profile: "Standard francais"
East: Argentinia Advanced
West is calling the TD and asking for adjustment when he realised 2♦ was strong opener.
North/South played French Standard and had the Agreement of 2♦ strongest opening but did not alert which I guess is normal in France (not sure). No CC loaded but both players had "Standard francais" in their profile without any further comments.
No additional rules or restrictions defined in the tourney.
What is the correct way to handle the call?