Echognome, on May 30 2006, 11:42 AM, said:
I don't dispute that. But for whatever reason, supposing you are a passed hand and you bid however you bid (as here when you bid 3♦). If partner chooses not to bid again, wtp? Partner has forced YOU to game. You are the limited hand. I'm not saying this is the best or the most ideal way to play, but I don't find any great issue with it either.
If it's the hand I am thinking of, then I knew we had the values for game or thereabouts, but I didn't really like my hand for game (so maybe I shouldn't have bid 2♠ to begin with). I guess I had buyer's remorse. Anyway, since we were playing BAM, I decided to rest in a playable part-score.
I'm certainly not claiming that I was correct in my bidding. I do think it's an interesting question. If partner forces YOU to game, then is it ok for PARTNER to stop below game? I imagine the relevant situations are few and far between. The only other example I can think of is if partner makes a GF relay and then decides (due to a misfit, e.g.) that it might be better to play in part-score. Note that I expect these to be rare enough that they are not part of the agreements and often partner will not have the opportunity to sign off. I also expect these to happen in a straight captain-crew situation, not one where we are both deciding on the level.
You might have bid 3
♦ with more than a minimum, safely, because you 'know' partner won't pass since he just forced to game. That is the problem.
If you can think of some auction where one player forces to game and his partner makes a bid that MUST show a minimum, then you might have my attention with your theory that the game forcer should be able to change his mind.
This sort of thing happens more often in relay systems. JoshS and I were recently trading stories. I had opened something like QJ AQ x AQxxxxxx with a strong club, relayed, and found partner 2470. I relayed with 4
♣ and he bid 4
♦ showing two controls. I passed him there and unsurprisingly we were too high already, but it was only going to get worse if I bid any game. I think that was ok because partner had limited his hand (in terms of controls anyway).
He gave me an example that was even more spectacular. It went a strong 1
♣, 1
♥ response showing spades, 1NT rebid showing a minimum strong club, three suited with short spades. He passed that as responder since he had stretched to bid 1
♥ to begin with based on good spades and nothing outside. I don't know the exact hand, but again that seems ok to me. I suppose my conditions would be:
1) You are a bare minimum, or even more likely slightly subminimum having stretched already
2) You are the 'captain' of the auction
3) The auction has revealed a bad misfit
and the case that can't exist in the hand that started this thread...
4) Partner has limited himself to the point where you either lack or just barely reach the values for game.
Please let me know about any questions or interest or bug reports about GIB.