Alerting of Doubles
#1
Posted 2009-March-09, 04:12
* Take-out
* Penalty
* Optional
* Do something intelligent
-doubles are not alertable, but specific suit-showing bids for example DONT or support Dbl are alertable.
How would you formulate this?
#2
Posted 2009-March-09, 04:32
You can always ask...
This is not too bad IMHO....
#3
Posted 2009-March-09, 05:34
"You can always ask" is only true in theory.
Consider the following:
Case A: 1♣ (natural) Dbl. Would you always ask what Dbl is?
Case B: 1♣ (could be short) Dbl. Would you now always ask what Dbl is?
Case C: 1♣ (Polish) Dbl. Would you now always ask what Dbl is?
Case D: 1♣ (Precision) Dbl. Would you now always ask what Dbl is?
Most people wouldn't ask in case A, and most would in case D. The people in cases B and C would perhaps start out with "always ask" but having heard dozens of similar and dozens of vague answers, they will give up and no longer ask.
Then they meet the pair that has made special agreements versus case B or C and get a bad score. Who is at fault? THE REGULATIONS!
#4
Posted 2009-March-09, 06:42
Gerben42, on Mar 9 2009, 12:34 PM, said:
I agree!
A simple example: who will ask about 1♣-(1♦)-Dbl? All beginners learn that this shows 4-4M, but some advanced/expert players play this as transfer with 4+♥.
#5
Posted 2009-March-09, 07:10
Gerben42, on Mar 9 2009, 11:12 AM, said:
* Take-out
* Penalty
* Optional
* Do something intelligent
-doubles are not alertable, but specific suit-showing bids for example DONT or support Dbl are alertable.
How would you formulate this?
Now, this is a bit of a sore point for me at the moment; but I'll have a go at answering the question anyway ...
First of all, the definitions are always going to be slightly fuzzy. You can't expect to be able to write down a totally mechanical rule for deciding what category a double fits into.
With that in mind, IMO the best way to approach it is to:
1. Give a rough explanation of what the terms "take-out" and "penalty" mean, plus two extra terms of your choice (let's say "optional" and "value-showing"). Make it obvious that these explanations aren't intended to be totally precise. (Though you could take the opportunity to clear up a few particular cases, if they fit in here more naturally than as separate examples).
2. Write your general rule in the form "Double is not alertable if it is take-out, penalty, or anything in between such as optional or value-showing. All other doubles are alertable."
3. Give specific examples of alertable and non-alertable doubles.
I hope you have better luck than me.
#6
Posted 2009-March-09, 08:29
#7
Posted 2009-March-09, 09:17
#8
Posted 2009-March-09, 09:34
Practice Goodwill and Active Ethics
Director "Please"!
#9
Posted 2009-March-09, 09:44
JoAnneM, on Mar 9 2009, 10:34 AM, said:
Of course he would. I suspect he means doubles such as negative doubles and responsive doubles which imply one or two other (usually known) suits, and not doubles that show 1 unspecific suit.
So many experts, not enough X cards.
#10
Posted 2009-March-09, 10:07
Gerben42, on Mar 9 2009, 11:34 AM, said:
We have been playing with this rule in Scotland for the past 18 months. However you must pre-alert any unusual doubles. The most common pre-alert is "our double of your strong 1NT is artificial"; my pre-alert includes that many doubles and redoubles can be transfers.
It makes no difference to the top players, as they look at convention cards and are generally aware.
The club players love it, as they never knew what doubles to alert anyhow and the experts in the clubs win regardless of whether their doubles are strange, alerted or not. Most of the club players play the same system and know 'who is funny'.
Where you would be most concerned is the larger congresses where club players might get exploited by unscrupulous experts. That this is not seen as a problem is probably because (1) 95% play basically the same system (2) we do not have many experts and (3) most of the experts are pretty pleasant at these congresses.
As far as I am aware, the only complaints have been from the English. And this is perhaps why the EBU will not be adopting this rule, as their community is a lot broader than the Scottish.
Paul
#11
Posted 2009-March-10, 11:17
P (P) P (1♦)
X
showing a 10 count or so and diamonds...which it would for most beginners I know. I got out of it by pointing out that this time there was no damage, but I don't like regulations that require beginners to alert natural, intuitive bids.
#12
Posted 2009-March-10, 11:24
JoAnneM, on Mar 9 2009, 10:34 AM, said:
I suspect that Nuno meant "Around here, we alert no doubles" exactly as he wrote it. Note that this is by regulation.
#13
Posted 2009-March-10, 11:39
jtfanclub, on Mar 10 2009, 12:17 PM, said:
P (P) P (1♦)
X
showing a 10 count or so and diamonds...which it would for most beginners I know. I got out of it by pointing out that this time there was no damage, but I don't like regulations that require beginners to alert natural, intuitive bids.
HUH?? I see nothing natural or intuitive about that. Furthurmore, I know of no one, even rank novices who would play it that way.
#14
Posted 2009-March-10, 12:11
hanp, on Mar 10 2009, 06:24 PM, said:
JoAnneM, on Mar 9 2009, 10:34 AM, said:
I suspect that Nuno meant "Around here, we alert no doubles" exactly as he wrote it. Note that this is by regulation.
I think so to. In Belgium the rule is clear: no Dbl or RDbl may be alerted! So conventional, penalty, takeout, snapdragon, 0/3 keycards, "I want a coke"-dbl,... may not be alerted.
#15
Posted 2009-March-10, 17:36
Also note that opponents can ask, and if you become the declaring side you are required to provide the additional information before they make their opening lead.
By contrast a Pass which is anything but "content" or "nothing to contribute" IS alertable (as it must be because you can hardly be put on notice otherwise!!). This occurs frequently both in relay auctions and multis...
regards,
#16
Posted 2009-March-10, 19:01
#17
Posted 2009-March-10, 19:29
hanp, on Mar 10 2009, 05:24 PM, said:
JoAnneM, on Mar 9 2009, 10:34 AM, said:
I suspect that Nuno meant "Around here, we alert no doubles" exactly as he wrote it. Note that this is by regulation.
Correct.
As I said, we tried alerting artificial dbls but then some people abused the rule when it came to "optional dbls", so we just decided to make all doubles non alertable.
#18
Posted 2009-March-11, 05:26
Doubles showing otherwise diffcult to bid hands (takeout doubles, card showing doubles, optional doubles, etc.) and penalty doubles are not "special doubles".
You could try to come up with a specific definition, but I agree with David that that will be very hard to do.
Instead, I would go with the "vague definition strategy": Alert all doubles where you can expect that your opponents will assign an other meaning to it than you do. This makes normal takeout doubles, normal style negative doubles, penalty doubles of 1NT openings and lead directing doubles of Jacoby transfers not alertable (at least where I play). After all, this is the meaning that I expect my opponents to assign to them.
Special doubles will then be alertable. Most of those doubles occur in situations where you have various options on how to play the double. Therefore, opponents cannot have an expectation of what the double means.
I know that the vague definition strategy has its drawbacks, but it works a lot better than very specific definitions that turn out to be not watertight. (Not to mention that a long list of definitions will loose 99% of the players.)
Rik
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the new discoveries, is not “Eureka!” (I found it!), but “That’s funny…” – Isaac Asimov
The only reason God did not put "Thou shalt mind thine own business" in the Ten Commandments was that He thought that it was too obvious to need stating. - Kenberg
#19
Posted 2009-March-11, 05:47
Quote
This is what I want! If we together can come up with this definition, then we can go to our NBO and ask them to think about adopting it.
I've been told off by opponents that my Dbl of a Polish ♣ that showed 5+♥ was akin to cheating, and I feel very strongly that it was unfair to the opponents to not alert this Dbl, but against the regulations if I would alert it.
#20
Posted 2009-March-11, 07:16
Alert all doubles that have a meaning that would be unexpected by a significant majority of players.
For example:
1♥ - x
If the double was a penalty double, that would be alertable (surely no one would expect a double of a 1♥ opening bid to be for penalties?).
If the double showed length in clubs it would be alertable.
While this rule seems a little fuzzy on first glance, I suspect that it would be very easy to deal with in practice.

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