Heh. I always thought of "could be short" as "could be as short as 2 cards" - meaning that if pard could have 0 or 1, I should alert, not announce. Seems I was wrong.
I was taught that, in SA (or 2/1 for that matter), when you don't have a 5 card suit, so that either you're balanced or you're 4441, you open, in the latter case, 1
♦ unless the shortage is in
♦, when you open 1
♣, and in the former case, when you're outside the range for a NT opening, there are different views. If you have a four card minor, you open that suit (usually
♦ if you're 44 in the minors). If you don't have a four card minor, you're 44 in the majors, and you agree with partner whether to always open in the 3 card suit (in which case a 1
♦ opening may show exactly 4=4=3=2 distribution) or to always open in clubs (in which case 1
♦ will guarantee 4 diamonds, and 1
♣ "could be short" - ie the 4=4=3=2 hand). Given what I've seen here, I would have to concede that under ACBL regs a pair could announce "could be short" with hands not matching this description, but even if I knew they weren't playing SA or 2/1, I'm not sure that it would occur to me at the table that they might not have this distribution. I suppose I'm going to have to start asking more questions.
Quote
(the regulations say "could be short is the only non-natural meaning" -- who knows what this means though)
Who indeed? The thing is, I looked for where the regs say that, and I couldn't find it. Pointer, please?
In general, I would expect a player with a 5 card or longer suit to open in that suit, unless he's opening an artificial bid or a natural NT. If he has a 5 card or longer suit, and opens in a shorter one, then IMO he's playing a canapé system, in which case his side must both pre-alert, and alert the opening bids. Unfortunately, the alert regulation, while it mentions "canapé" several times, doesn't define the term.
That whole "what are we playing against 12-15 NT" thing just boggles my mind. Is there
any excuse for a pair to have this kind of discussion in the middle of a hand? Is there
any excuse for the TD not coming down on them like a ton of bricks? Possiblely, but it would be very rare, IMO. So if the NOS achieves a score worse than they might have done because of this discussion, the NOS is entitled to, and should get, a score adjustment. Similarly for the OS. In any case, it seems to me a PP ought to be virtually automatic. The NOS can ask the TD to waive such penalties, of course. They'd have to come up with a pretty good reason. BTW, a score adjustment is not a penalty - I don't believe it correct for a player to ask the TD to waive a score adjustment.