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Falling asleep

#1 User is offline   mr1303 

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Posted 2012-September-14, 07:15

imagine the scenario. You've had the day at work to end all days. You get home and sit down, and nod off immediately, only to get a call from your irritable bridge partner wondering why you haven't turned up. You rush down and speedball the first round, and manage to get some respectability, but towards the end of the night, you're starting to nod off again. You see in the haze your RHO call 1nt. You hold:

Ax
QJTx
KQ87x
xx

You decide that this is worth an Asptro 2C overcall, noting that your LHO hasn't announced the NT range, and worse, partner hasn't alerted the 2C overcall. After thinking "bunch of dolts" to yourself, you look again at RHO's call and realise that you're the dolt, as RHO actually opened 1S.

The auction proceeds as follows:

1NT 2C P 3C
P ?

1) Is the lack of announcement and failure to alert UI.

2) Is there AI of looking at opener's call that would render any UI redundant.

3) If you were in this situation, what would you call now?

4) I was too tired to consider what the ethical call might be, so I decided that I was going to bid 3NT and call the director at the end of the hand. Which I did. If you were the director, how would you rule?

Partner held:

9xx
Kx
109xx
AKQx
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#2 User is offline   ahydra 

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Posted 2012-September-14, 07:40

You mean 1S 2C p 3C? And surely partner calls more than 3C with that!

Assuming you didn't give away the fact you misbid e.g. by a surprised look when you saw 1NT was actually 1S, then partner has no UI and can do what he likes.

Your UI situation is hard though. I guess the TD has to judge "did the failure to alert 2C wake you up to the fact that you had read RHO's call wrong" (I'm really not sure what to do with the failure to announce). It would probably be reasonable to rule that it did, and hence we need to look at LAs, which depend on what 3C means in response to 2C Asptro.

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#3 User is offline   Zelandakh 

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Posted 2012-September-14, 07:59

You need to tell us what a 3 response to an Asptro 2 means to you since there are multiple versions of the convention around. Most likely you should be bidding 3 next but it does depend what your system looks like. In any case, bidding 3NT is almost certainly wrong. It maximises the chance of partner dropping you in a playable spot and is therefore suggested by the UI you have available. I would assume that the Director ruled against you here?
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#4 User is offline   kenrexford 

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Posted 2012-September-14, 09:01

This is kind of a curious situation. I mean, I cannot imagine that you could possibly have unauthorized information that the auction is at it appears on the table simply no matter what the source of your decision to actually look at the table correctly later. Trying to guess timing and motives seems dumb to me. If the auction on the table is 1-2-P-3, I don't even think, "Hey partner -- they opened 1" should be bad enough to cause a problem, because the auction is as it is.

Granted, some things might cause partner to have UI, but I just cannot fathom the actual auction being unauthorized information no matter what.

So, what to bid? 3NT seems reasonable, as it is the most likely to end this disaster, and you might make it somehow. You have no reasonable chance on the actual cards, but maybe partner has the club Ace, the diamond Ace, and Q109x in spades, with the spade Jack lead? LOL
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#5 User is offline   blackshoe 

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Posted 2012-September-14, 17:02

The lack of announcement, had there actually been such, would be MI, but since the opening bid wasn't 1NT, there's no MI.

The lack of an expected alert from partner is may convey UI. The auction on the table is AI. Looking at the actual auction, what does partner's failure to alert suggest? Well, it suggests he thinks your 2 is natural, given normal methods. So his three clubs is a raise, conveying whatever information about his hand such a raise would convey in your system. That suggests, to me at least, that you need to bid a red suit, or 3NT, and hope you survive. Is pass a logical alternative? I think not, but it depends on your methods over an Asptro 2. If 3 is forcing in your methods, then pass is not an LA. As I played the convention, years ago, 3 is forcing and 3 is the system bid now, showing 5 and 4, so that's what I'd bid. Partner can make of that what he will, since he has no UI. If he passes, and you make 3, I would not adjust the score. More interesting is what happens if partner bids 3. If that means "bid 3NT if you have a stopper" then I think you have to bid 3NT. Again, I wouldn't adjust the score — I think even if 3NT makes it's "rub of the green".

If pass over 3 is a LA in the partnership's Asptro methods, my ruling would be different.
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#6 User is offline   mr1303 

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Posted 2012-September-14, 17:13

I'm not sure what 3C would be. It would show clubs, and show a better hand than pass, but I don't think it'd be forcing.

On the other hand, the opponents never led spades at all during the play, and 3NT made with 2 overtricks. Would that influence your ruling?
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#7 User is offline   blackshoe 

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Posted 2012-September-14, 17:16

No. Should it?

I should have mentioned when I said that 3 is forcing in my old methods, it's also artificial.
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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
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#8 User is offline   alanmet 

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Posted 2012-September-14, 19:01

You have simply misbid. There can't be UI because your partner hasn't alerted because he has no reason to.
You have to simply try to resue the situation the best you can.
The chances are you are not going to benefit from your mis-bid and if you do it is your good luck.
The laws are not there to penalise people for making stupid mistakes.
Cheers
Alan

View Postmr1303, on 2012-September-14, 07:15, said:

imagine the scenario. You've had the day at work to end all days. You get home and sit down, and nod off immediately, only to get a call from your irritable bridge partner wondering why you haven't turned up. You rush down and speedball the first round, and manage to get some respectability, but towards the end of the night, you're starting to nod off again. You see in the haze your RHO call 1nt. You hold:

Ax
QJTx
KQ87x
xx

You decide that this is worth an Asptro 2C overcall, noting that your LHO hasn't announced the NT range, and worse, partner hasn't alerted the 2C overcall. After thinking "bunch of dolts" to yourself, you look again at RHO's call and realise that you're the dolt, as RHO actually opened 1S.

The auction proceeds as follows:

1NT 2C P 3C
P ?

1) Is the lack of announcement and failure to alert UI.

2) Is there AI of looking at opener's call that would render any UI redundant.

3) If you were in this situation, what would you call now?

4) I was too tired to consider what the ethical call might be, so I decided that I was going to bid 3NT and call the director at the end of the hand. Which I did. If you were the director, how would you rule?

Partner held:

9xx
Kx
109xx
AKQx

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#9 User is offline   Trinidad 

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Posted 2012-September-15, 01:29

The lacking alert is UI. The auction is not.

It is generally accepted that (in a different situation) it is ok to use partner's (lack of) alert to see that you pulled the wrong bidding card and you are allowed to change to your intended bid.

Here, you did intend to bid 2, so the bid stands. But you are allowed to know that they opened 1. That means that you are also allowed to know that:
- your 2 was natural (assuming that you were awake enough to know that 2 over 1 is natural)
- partner has a raise of a natural overcall.

With that information you can pick your bid.

What bid you try is a technical question, but I would just pass. There is no way we will find a making contract, so let's just play one where we are not doubled. (In MPs, you will have a bottom, but in IMPs you can still save a lot of IMPs: -300 or -150 is a lot better than -1100 or -800.) The fact that 3NT is down several opposite partner's actual hand -a hand he can't have because it is way too strong for a simple raise to 3- shows that it is best to stay as low as possible. (A bid of 3 will be interpreted as forcing, showing a stopper seeking 3NT. So don't start something like that.)

Rik
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#10 User is offline   gordontd 

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Posted 2012-September-15, 02:36

View Postalanmet, on 2012-September-14, 19:01, said:

There can't be UI because your partner hasn't alerted because he has no reason to.

This is wrong.

Quote

L16B. Extraneous Information from Partner
1. (a) After a player makes available to his partner extraneous
information that may suggest a call or play, as for example by a
remark, a question, a reply to a question, an unexpected alert or
failure to alert, or by unmistakable hesitation, unwonted speed,
special emphasis, tone, gesture, movement, or mannerism, the
partner may not choose from among logical alternatives one that
could demonstrably have been suggested over another by the
extraneous information.

Gordon Rainsford
London UK
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#11 User is offline   mink 

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Posted 2012-September-15, 07:47

By the non-alert you got the UI that partner thinks your 2 bid was natural.
By seeing the 1 opening bid you get the AI that your partner thinks that your 2 bid was natural.
In such a case I strongly believe that the UI is no longer relevant. No law requires you to ignore AI, which would be necessary if it was forbidden now to make calls that are suggested by the UI. On the contrary, Law 16A1a explicitly allows you to use AI, if it "is unaffected by unauthorized information from another source; ...". I cannot see how a missing Alert can affect a bidding card lying on the table.

Of course, the UI may have been one of the clues that made you see the AI. But it was in no way required to make to 1 opening visible to you.

Karl
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#12 User is offline   phil_20686 

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Posted 2012-September-15, 08:16

View Postgordontd, on 2012-September-15, 02:36, said:

This is wrong.


I think Alan is right. If you allow that following proper procedure in alerting can lead to extraneous information you rapidly go to a crazy place:

Suppose you are playing in a partnership, and you are 90% sure you have agreed to play jacoby, so you bid 2N over 1M and partner alerts, and bids 3d. Your argument means that in this situation, I have benefited from the alert to the tune of my uncertainty, and am unable to `benefit' by choosing a "logical alternative" suggested by the alert, like investigating slam by bidding 4c, since with the alert I might have worried that 3c might have been natural and that partner would think that my 4c bid might have been natural.

Suppose you play a complex relay system, and 1% of the time partner gets it wrong, but on this occasion you ahve five rounds of bidding describing your shape (all artificial) and then 3S to set the suit, which your partner does not alert, correctly. Since you know that occasionally partner forgets the system, and misbids, but in this case his expected failure to alert has confirmed that he bid correctly. A strict interpretation would mean that you were banned from initiating further relays, since the lack alert has yielded the UI that on this occasion partner has bid correctly, and using further relays is clearly a "logical alternative suggested by the UI".

If you rule that partner correctly alerting your bid can constitutes UI, then you would have to rule that UI had been transmitted in both of the above situations, which is clearly ridiculous, and renders the game unplayable.








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#13 User is offline   aguahombre 

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Posted 2012-September-15, 08:41

Phil and Alan:

Gordon merely said the statement about the non alert not being UI was wrong. Trinidad also states the non alert was UI. Just because we have UI doesn't mean we are screwed.
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#14 User is offline   blackshoe 

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Posted 2012-September-15, 10:24

Law 16 speaks of extraneous information, which may suggest a call or play. An expected alert or lack of alert is not extraneous, so does not in itself suggest a call or play. So there is no UI from an expected alert or failure to alert.
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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
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#15 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2012-September-15, 15:54

View Postblackshoe, on 2012-September-15, 10:24, said:

Law 16 speaks of extraneous information, which may suggest a call or play. An expected alert or lack of alert is not extraneous, so does not in itself suggest a call or play. So there is no UI from an expected alert or failure to alert.

But this failure to alert was NOT expected -- he expected partner to alert his ASPTRO bid.

#16 User is offline   blackshoe 

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Posted 2012-September-15, 16:30

View Postblackshoe, on 2012-September-15, 10:24, said:

Law 16 speaks of extraneous information, which may suggest a call or play. An expected alert or lack of alert is not extraneous, so does not in itself suggest a call or play. So there is no UI from an expected alert or failure to alert.


View Postbarmar, on 2012-September-15, 15:54, said:

But this failure to alert was NOT expected -- he expected partner to alert his ASPTRO bid.

I was speaking generally, not talking about this particular case.
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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
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#17 User is offline   Fluffy 

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Posted 2012-September-16, 03:15

I think we are going too far, if an info that is on plain sight over the table and got there by normal procedures becomes unavaible to me.
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#18 User is offline   gordontd 

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Posted 2012-September-16, 04:00

View Postphil_20686, on 2012-September-15, 08:16, said:

I think Alan is right.

I think you should read the law I quoted.
Gordon Rainsford
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#19 User is offline   lamford 

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Posted 2012-September-16, 09:15

View Postgordontd, on 2012-September-16, 04:00, said:

I think you should read the law I quoted.

I agree with Gordon that there is UI, as there was an unexpected failure to alert, and there is a footnote which clarifies that this is "unexpected in relation to the basis of his action".

However the UI tells him nothing, as he can see from the auction that he has misbid, so he can make any call he wants. His methods over 1NT are completely irrelevant as that was not the auction.
I prefer to give the lawmakers credit for stating things for a reason - barmar
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#20 User is offline   Zelandakh 

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Posted 2012-September-17, 04:34

Phil, what does partner correctly alerting your bid as expected have to do with a situation where partner correctly but unexpectedly alerts your bid. Say you are 90% certain you play Jacoby transfers over 1NT. So you respond 2. Partner correctly alerts this and suddenly you remember that you actually agreed this to be Forcing Stayman. No problem though, you have a GF hand with 5 hearts and can just proceed with the FS auction. Noone will ever know the difference and since the auction and methods are being judged as AI, this seems to be allowed under this interpretation. Do you not have a problem with this?

How about playing in a jurisdiction that allows alerts above 3NT and the auction starts 1 - 3; 4, bid as a natural slam try. Partner correctly alerts and now I remember our agreement is actually Gerber. Partner responds 4 and I call 6. Still no problem? I can see from the auction that I misbid after all.
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