barmar, on 2017-March-04, 11:46, said:
I'm not sure that's true.
Artificial cue bids are in general not alertable, unless they have a "highly unusual and unexpected" meaning. I don't think I'd be too far off if I considered anything other than Michaels for a cue bid of an opening 1-bid to be highly unusual and unexpected. IMHO, any other meaning is less expected than the Spanish Inquisition.
The "highly unusual" etc. business is a general exception to
any bid that normally does not require an alert.
From the Alert Procedure:
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Most cuebids are not Alertable. However, any cuebid which conveys a very unusual or unexpected meaning still requires an Alert.
Example: 1♠-2♥-P-2♠
If the 2♠ bid is a heart raise with values or some constructive hand, no Alert is required.
If the 2♠ bid is a transfer to clubs, an Alert is required.
Example: 1♦-2♦
If the 2♦ bid shows the majors (Michaels), clubs and spades (top/bottom) or some other two-suiter (not including diamonds), no Alert is required.
Apparently a two-suited cue bid that includes the suit bid by the opponents is "highly unusual" enough to require an alert. Also apparently any two suiter that does not include the suit bid by the opponents is not unusual enough to meet that criterion. So your "anything other than Michaels is highly unusual" doesn't fly. There is also
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"Highly unusual and unexpected" should be determined in light of historical usage rather than local geographical usage.
Perhaps the C&C Committee should revisit this in view of the "stranglehold" that Michaels cue bids have achieved over the past half century or so, but they have not done so yet.