Jammer 2 Diamonds
#1
Posted 2010-April-25, 10:29
#2
Posted 2010-April-25, 10:40
waubrey, on Apr 25 2010, 07:29 PM, said:
I suspect that this is legal in most parts of the world in most events.
In the ACBL, the bid isn't sanctioned until you hit superchart events. You might run into trouble even there, since the bid is often opened on 4-4 patterns and could be deemed destructive.
#3
Posted 2010-April-25, 10:45
#4
Posted 2010-April-25, 10:49
waubrey, on Apr 25 2010, 07:45 PM, said:
That would definitely be classed as intrinsically destructive
#5
Posted 2010-April-25, 12:22
Carl
#6
Posted 2010-April-25, 12:24
Carl, on Apr 25 2010, 09:22 PM, said:
If members of the C+C committee or people who spend lots of money hiring pros play it, its obstructive...
#7
Posted 2010-April-25, 13:22
In a weird, nonsensical perspective.
Carl
#8
Posted 2010-April-25, 13:50
1. Artificial weak bids at the two or three level (including those with
strong adjuncts) must possess,
a) a known suit or
bid.
It is not legal in GCC or Mid Chart. Even in Superchart, " Conventions and/or agreements whose primary purpose is to destroy the opponents methods." is not allowed so if you can convince the C&C Committee that this would not be the primary purpose, you can make an application to have that convention allowed.
Read it all yourself
http://www.acbl.org/assets/documents/play/...ntion-Chart.pdf
#9
Posted 2010-April-25, 18:49
events, would that be considered a fair argument for it being not primarily for
destructive purposes?
Or is that non-applicable logic in this case?
Carl
#10
Posted 2010-April-26, 02:47
hrothgar, on Apr 25 2010, 05:40 PM, said:
waubrey, on Apr 25 2010, 07:29 PM, said:
I suspect that this is legal in most parts of the world in most events.
In the ACBL, the bid isn't sanctioned until you hit superchart events. You might run into trouble even there, since the bid is often opened on 4-4 patterns and could be deemed destructive.
If it is "ANY 3-suiter" then it won't be allowed very much because it's a BSC. If there's a known suit it will indeed be allowed pretty much everywhere except the land of the free. 4-9 balanced wouldn't be allowed either, again BSC.
#11
Posted 2010-April-26, 03:12
hrothgar, on Apr 25 2010, 11:40 AM, said:
No, it's not even SuperChart legal, regardless of whether you judge it to be "destructive" or not (which IMO is far from clear). The problem is that basically weak artificial bids must have or deny the suit bid even at SuperChart level. Here this means that you can play 2D as some weird weak bid, but only if
1) it shows a specific suit, or
2) it denies D and shows 1-2 other possible suits
On the other hand, I think it was generally found that playing the "long spade Jammer" version was much more sound (4+ spades is a known "suit"), so you could at least play that.
#12
Posted 2010-April-26, 03:30
#13
Posted 2010-April-26, 03:39
helene_t, on Apr 26 2010, 04:30 AM, said:
Well, SuperChart incorporates the MidChart, which has a specific provision allowing multi. But even without that, you can still play it since it promises 1 of 2 suits (majors), neither the suit bid (♦). You could not play 2♥ or 2♠ as "multi" however, nor can you play Wilkcoz 2♦, which shows a 2 suiter with a major (since it could have diamonds). Here's the relevant part of the SuperChart:
Quote
a) a known suit or
b) one of no more than two possible suits not to include the suit
#14
Posted 2010-April-26, 03:41
helene_t, on Apr 26 2010, 04:30 AM, said:
Best to read the regulation. There have been a couple incorrect statements presented here, including the "land of the free" by Free.
http://www.acbl.org/...ntion-Chart.pdf
#15
Posted 2010-April-26, 03:43
I suppose the difference is that Wilcosz has the possible diamond suit as part of it's specification, while multi just might have it incidentally. It's just that I don't think such a distinction makes sense, as one can always rephrase a definition so a specified feature becomes negative inference. But I am probably wrong.
Peachy, your link doesn't work.
#17
Posted 2010-April-26, 05:35
helene_t, on Apr 26 2010, 10:43 AM, said:
I suppose the difference is that Wilcosz has the possible diamond suit as part of it's specification, while multi just might have it incidentally. It's just that I don't think such a distinction makes sense, as one can always rephrase a definition so a specified feature becomes negative inference. But I am probably wrong.
Peachy, your link doesn't work.
Here in Belgium Wilkosz is also not allowed in most tournaments. Wilkosz is a BSC, while the multi (only if it shows a 6 card Major) is an exception. Playing multi with 5 card Majors is also not allowed, again BSC.
#18
Posted 2010-April-26, 05:51
helene_t, on Apr 26 2010, 09:43 AM, said:
Huh? Pedantic is not the proper word to use in that paragraph. Pedantic is someone who needlessly corrects other people's posts, most often incorrect by some minor detail or an inaccurate synonym.
George Carlin

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