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Disclosure What are opponents entitled to know

#121 User is offline   StevenG 

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Posted 2015-May-04, 11:52

 campboy, on 2015-May-04, 11:06, said:

The question "What is Widget?" is not a question about this partnership's agreement (or lack of it). It is a factual question about the meaning of a word that opponents do not understand. It has a definite answer. OP made it clear what this answer is.

The players learnt Widget from somewhere. They haven't read the supposedly definitive document, so presumably they have learnt it from clubmates. So there must be a set of players who play it differently from standard, and probably at least two different sets of players, given the nature of the problem. So Widget has already developed a variety of meanings.

I play Halmic as a defence to 1NTx, and so does a friednd of mine. How we play it varies significantly, and I would never offer to play Halmic without a detailed discussion at to what was meant. I certainly wouldn't expect anyone to go to a website and tell me how I ought to play it.
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#122 User is offline   campboy 

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Posted 2015-May-04, 13:49

 mikeh, on 2015-May-04, 11:24, said:

Nobody ever asked, or would in real life (if they knew anything about disclosure rules): what is widget? They ask: what did that bid show? Or, if they are sticklers for the correct procedure: what is your agreement about what that bid shows?

Of course they would not ask that as the first question. But, as I said, if they asked what the bid showed and were told "our only agreement is that we play Widget", which several people in this thread have suggested is the correct answer, the next question would naturally be "so what is Widget?"
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#123 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2015-May-04, 14:23

 campboy, on 2015-May-04, 13:49, said:

Of course they would not ask that as the first question. But, as I said, if they asked what the bid showed and were told "our only agreement is that we play Widget", which several people in this thread have suggested is the correct answer, the next question would naturally be "so what is Widget?"

I'm not sure that's a question that they're required to answer. You're required to explain your agreements, not give bridge lessons.

#124 User is offline   mikeh 

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Posted 2015-May-04, 14:25

 campboy, on 2015-May-04, 13:49, said:

Of course they would not ask that as the first question. But, as I said, if they asked what the bid showed and were told "our only agreement is that we play Widget", which several people in this thread have suggested is the correct answer, the next question would naturally be "so what is Widget?"


You really need to refresh your knowledge of the obligations on the bidding pair after an alert.

They are not being asked: what convention do you play?

People often get sloppy about the questions and the answers, but what the question should be is: what is your agreement as to the meaning of the alerted call?

The answer is sometimes sloppily and improperly given as 'widget'. But the correct answer, assuming the player thinks they have agreed to play widget, is to explain what, as far as he knows, the call means in widget. To the extent that anyone here suggested that a proper answer to a question prompted by an alert is the name of the convention, they are flat out wrong...not that I actually see anyone suggesting this, btw.

If he screws up and says, as if this were an acceptable answer: 'we play widget', then the opps may in turn get sloppy and ask: what is widget? But that would be improper: they should ask, kindly or irritably as the occasion and personalities warrant: 'no...we aren't asking for the name of your convention, and we aren't asking you to explain the entire convention.....please tell us your understanding of what you and your partner have agreed his action shows'.

If the answer to the original question is: 'we play widget....he has a widget hand...', the next question should NEVER be 'what is widget?'. It should be: what is your agreement as to what that call meant, and please don't just tell me the name of the convention....tell me what it shows!

The fact that, it appears, you don't know what questions you should be asking makes your opinions about what the innocent pair ought to be told of dubious value.

To give you a concrete example, at the local level where we can't play our preferred defence to a strong 1N, my current partner and I play Molson.....a little known defence.

Say I double in direct seat...partner alerts.

If asked, he shouldn't say: we play Molson.

if he does, then the opps shouldn't say: what is Molson? They don't give a damn about what Molson is...they aren't about to start playing it mid-session. All they care about is what am I showing by my double. That's the question they are entitled to ask...more accurately, they are entitled to know what my partner thinks is our agreement. If that turns out not to be my understanding, then the outcome depends on which of 3 scenarios obtain. One is that he got it right, and I forgot our agreement. Usually there is no adjustment, altho if I subsequently take action based on his explanation, there may be an adjustment. The second is that I got it right, and he forgot. Now there may well be an adjustment if the misinformation caused a problem for the innocent side.

The third is what happened here: we each had our own idea of what Molson was, we hadn't in fact discussed it so had never come to a common understanding about double, and now the question of whether an adjustment is due arises only when we see if the alert procedure provided me with information to which I was not entitled, but relied upon to do or not do something.
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#125 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2015-May-04, 14:31

 StevenG, on 2015-May-04, 11:52, said:

The players learnt Widget from somewhere. They haven't read the supposedly definitive document, so presumably they have learnt it from clubmates. So there must be a set of players who play it differently from standard, and probably at least two different sets of players, given the nature of the problem. So Widget has already developed a variety of meanings.

Or it's possible that both of them simply misremember what they learned.

Consider the Astro family of convention. I'll bet there are players who can't keep straight which is which. So they'll agree on Aspro, but player A's understanding is actually Astro, while B's is Asptro.

It would be more understandable if only one of them deviated from the common meaning. Imagine players agreeing to play Drury. Most people these days actually play Reverse Drury, and it has become common to omit saying "Reverse". But a particularly pedantic player might hear his partner say "Let's play Drury", and assume he means classic Drury (for some reason he hasn't learned to ask for clarification rather than assuming).

#126 User is offline   blackshoe 

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Posted 2015-May-04, 18:34

 campboy, on 2015-May-04, 11:06, said:

The question "What is Widget?" is not a question about this partnership's agreement (or lack of it). It is a factual question about the meaning of a word that opponents do not understand. It has a definite answer. OP made it clear what this answer is.

The laws do not entitle the asker of this question, in the circumstance you describe, to any answer.
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#127 User is offline   WellSpyder 

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Posted 2015-May-05, 03:11

I am in the "no agreement" camp. But this does not feel like sufficient information to me, since it doesn't tell oppo everything that the widget bidders know, namely that they think they have an agreement. The name of this agreement, and the official meaning, are completely irrelevant. But I think oppo ought really to know "we don't have an agreement, but we think we do" (which is, of course, a logically impossible answer to give when asked for an explanation.....)
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#128 User is offline   Trinidad 

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Posted 2015-May-05, 08:47

 WellSpyder, on 2015-May-05, 03:11, said:

I am in the "no agreement" camp. But this does not feel like sufficient information to me, since it doesn't tell oppo everything that the widget bidders know, namely that they think they have an agreement. The name of this agreement, and the official meaning, are completely irrelevant. But I think oppo ought really to know "we don't have an agreement, but we think we do" (which is, of course, a logically impossible answer to give when asked for an explanation.....)

The correct explanation is perhaps: "We do have an agreement, even a special agreement, but we disagree on what the agreement is."

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#129 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2015-May-05, 08:50

 WellSpyder, on 2015-May-05, 03:11, said:

I am in the "no agreement" camp. But this does not feel like sufficient information to me, since it doesn't tell oppo everything that the widget bidders know, namely that they think they have an agreement. The name of this agreement, and the official meaning, are completely irrelevant. But I think oppo ought really to know "we don't have an agreement, but we think we do" (which is, of course, a logically impossible answer to give when asked for an explanation.....)

While the opponents might be entitled to know that you don't have an agreement, it's simply unreasonable to expect it in practice. Players can't explain things they don't know. Since the opponents each think they have a firm agreement, that's what they're going to explain.

Once you get to the end of the auction and the partner tries to correct the MI, then you'll learn that they don't really have an agreement.

#130 User is online   helene_t 

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Posted 2015-May-05, 09:00

Yes but the OP question was what opps "theoretically" are entitled to know, not what is reasonable to expect in practice.
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#131 User is offline   WellSpyder 

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Posted 2015-May-05, 09:05

 barmar, on 2015-May-05, 08:50, said:

While the opponents might be entitled to know that you don't have an agreement, it's simply unreasonable to expect it in practice. Players can't explain things they don't know. Since the opponents each think they have a firm agreement, that's what they're going to explain.

Once you get to the end of the auction and the partner tries to correct the MI, then you'll learn that they don't really have an agreement.

But we haven't been asked what the widgetters should tell their opponents, we have been asked what information the opponents are entitled to! As has already been implied, these don't have to be the same thing. The first is relevant to what we would expect to happen at the table. The second is relevant to what the score should be adjusted to if we decide there has been MI (and presumably also to the ruling about whether or not there has actually been MI, which does not seem to be in doubt on this occasion).
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#132 User is offline   dburn 

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Posted 2015-May-11, 11:02

The opponents are allowed to know what is true: "We have agreed to play Widget, but we have not discussed in any way how Widget operates (although we do know when it operates)." This is the equivalent of an alert given in a case where a player is sure his partner's bid is alertable, but does not know what it means.
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It little matters what they thought -
We hang for what they wrote.
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#133 User is offline   nige1 

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Posted 2015-May-11, 11:54

 dburn, on 2015-May-11, 11:02, said:

The opponents are allowed to know what is true: "We have agreed to play Widget, but we have not discussed in any way how Widget operates (although we do know when it operates)." This is the equivalent of an alert given in a case where a player is sure his partner's bid is alertable, but does not know what it means.
This description will apply to many conventions agreed by a new partnerships e.g. "UNT". Suppose that the partners haven't discussed "UNT"; but it's in their normal repertoire with other partners and both imagine that they know it. Are opponents really entitled only to the information that "We have agreed to play "UNT", but we have not discussed in any way how it operates (although we do know when it operates)"?

After all, the new partnership were happy to agree "UNT" by name. Rarely, will they have learnt it badly or forgotten it. More often, they will be on the same wave-length. Opponents seem at a disadvantage.
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#134 User is offline   FrancesHinden 

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Posted 2015-May-11, 14:33

Someone in the thread asked what was actually ruled.
This was only part of at the ruling. The players involved have only just been told the outcome.

Once the dust has settled, I'll post the full ruling on another thread.
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#135 User is offline   cherdano 

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Posted 2015-May-11, 15:16

I realize I still haven't posted my opinion on the original question, and David's post gives me a nice opportunity to do so.

 dburn, on 2015-May-11, 11:02, said:

The opponents are allowed to know what is true: "We have agreed to play Widget, but we have not discussed in any way how Widget operates (although we do know when it operates)."


I assume we all agree that this is the minimum information that the opponents are entitled to. But I don't think this is sufficient. Let me start with some extreme examples, that I think we all agree on:

- "We play BART as discussed in The Bridge World March 1986, page 43" may be a complete representation of the partnership discussion, but it is evidently not full disclosure - this sentence doesn't have the same meaning to someone who has not read, or do not remember page 43 on said The Bridge World edition. The opponent should be entitled to a description of the relevant parts of page 43.

- Let's say partnership X-Y has discussed "We play 2C has Acol Two in one major". The opponent Z doesn't know how strong of a bid and Acol Two typically is. Clearly (in my view) Z is entitled to an explanation of how strong an Acol Two typically is. But what do we do if X and Y have slightly different notions of what an Acol Two shows? Clearly, Z is not entitled to the knowledge that X and Y have different expectations for an Acol Two. At the same time, if he doesn't get any explanation about its strength, X is in a better position than Z when Y opens 2C, as he probably isn't that far off. And even if X realizes that Y's hand doesn't match his
expectations, he probably is in a better position to guess how he deviates than Z: someone for whom "Acol Two" is a sufficient description in a partnership discussion, is more likely to realize "Oh yeah, now I remember that some people actually think of Acol Two a bit stronger than what it really is supposed to show", and proceed to correctly guess Y's strength, than a random opponent. So what information is Z entitled to? In my view, it's something along the lines of: "Acol Two" most typically shows [insert your description of its strenght], but some play it a little bit stronger. Anything less does not give Z the same chance of guessing Y's hand as X does.

- Let's say a partnership agrees to play "2D is Ekrens, with standard continuations". Again, I think the opponents are entitled to the an explanation about standard continuations after Ekrens.

- Now to widget. Similarly I think that the opponent should be entitled to an explanation of the form Some think it shows A, some think it shows B, but really it shows C. (I still haven't figured out whether C should really be included in that explanation as a possibility - I would tend to think yes, but I could be talked out of that.) Again, I think someone for whom "we play widget" is sufficient in a partnership discussion will be in a better position to work out partner's holding than a random opponent - even when it turns out that they think it shows A and their partner think it shows B. They may know which problem "widget" is trying to solve, or they may know other conventions that apply in this situation (and be able to work out that their partner mistook "widget" for that other convention), etc.
Indeed, let's say during the play it becomes apparent to everyone that the person making the bid cannot have a hand matching agreement "A". We set up a competition between his partner (who thought widget shows "A") and one of the opponents (who is only told that partner thought it means "A"); the goal is to work out bidder's actual hand. You have to put money on who wins this competition. Would anyone pick a random opponent? I would always pick the partner.

So what do I base my opinion on?
- On the principle of full disclosure: the opponent should be in as good a position to work out someone's hand as their partner.
- On the laws. Yes, a partnership is only required to disclose "partnership agreements". But once you parse what it means to make an agreement, you cannot just use recite words that happen to have meanings to some players, but not to others; you have to give opponents an equal chance to work out the meanings of these words as the two parties having this partnership discussion.
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#136 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2015-May-11, 15:44

 nige1, on 2015-May-11, 11:54, said:

This description will apply to many conventions agreed by a new partnerships e.g. "UNT". Suppose that the partners haven't discussed "UNT"; but it's in their normal repertoire with other partners and both imagine that they know it. Are opponents really entitled only to the information that "We have agreed to play "UNT", but we have not discussed in any way how it operates (although we do know when it operates)"?

An example where this might actually arise is Michaels cue bids. Some people play that 2NT asks partner to bid his unknown minor, some play that 3 is pass/correct, and some use both, with one of them being stronger than the other. But I'll bet few many new partnerships never discuss this, and each player probably assumes that their understanding is the usual meaning.

#137 User is offline   nige1 

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Posted 2015-June-17, 15:55

 FrancesHinden, on 2015-May-11, 14:33, said:

Someone in the thread asked what was actually ruled.
This was only part of at the ruling. The players involved have only just been told the outcome.
Once the dust has settled, I'll post the full ruling on another thread.
Frances, please post the full ruling (if you haven't already done so). The committee's reasoning should be instructive.
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#138 User is offline   Zelandakh 

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Posted 2015-June-18, 10:27

I think this is actually easier in the EBU than most other jurisdictions because there there is a regulation saying that you need to alert a call where any one of the possible meanings would be alertable. This is the problem I have with Mike's position. The argument is based upon the notion that the widget bid was not alerted but it is reasonably clear that it should have been under the (lack of) agreement because one of the possible meanings was alertable. Barry's example here is a good one. If you only agreed Michaels then you should alert a 3 advance even if you think it more likely that 2NT would be used to reach the minor.

What is less clear is the more theoretical situation from the OP. Here it is impractical to follow the most popular suggestion of giving the actual agreement (of a convention name) because an opponent is perfectly entitled to ask what that means. We have heard on BBF of cases from international play in which conventions that most of us might regard as basic caused problems for opponents. I would certainly ask a supplementary question as to what "widget" is and would expect an answer for reasons Arend has already outlined.

In both cases there is clear MI, in the first because an alertable call was not alerted and in the second because the description of "widget" does not match the partnership agreement. It will be interesting to hear how the EBU themselves rule on the matter. When is/was the hearing Frances/Gordon?
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