When 2 meta-agreements apply
#1
Posted 2011-November-14, 06:50
Partner makes a call (without screens), and for me, 2 of our meta-rules might apply.
Should I:
-Explain the meta-rule I think applies and nothing else.
-Explain both meta-rules but don't say wich one I think applies.
-Explain both meta-rules and explain wich one of them I am gonna take right now.
For example:
1♠-(2♦!)-2♥
2♦ showing 5+ ♦ and exactly 4 hearts.
Now we play negative free bids at the 2 level if I should take 2♥ as natural, and we have cuebids showing invitational raise in spades.
RHO asks me what it means, and will later insist on me asking me if 2♥ is forcing or not.
bonus question: Does it change if instead of a stablished partnership, we are a casual one, and we face a situation such as (1♣)-1NT-(pass)-2♥, where 2♥ has a 40-60% of being nat or transfer where I live?
bonus question2: Does it make any sense to ask partner to leave the table to avoid UI when I tell the opponents wich of the options I am taking as the right one right now?
#2
Posted 2011-November-14, 07:37
#3
Posted 2011-November-14, 07:57
#4
Posted 2011-November-14, 08:05
Also, when should alert?
-If both options are natural
-If 1 option is natural and the other not
-If 1 option is natural, the other not, but I will take now the natural one as the good one.
-If the 2 options are artificial but I don´t know wich one it is.
#5
Posted 2011-November-14, 08:07
Fluffy, on 2011-November-14, 08:05, said:
afaik, opps never have the right to know how you're "taking" a call. They only have the right to know your agreements, both implicit and explicit.
"...we live off being battle-scarred veterans who manage to hate our opponents slightly more than we hate each other. -- Hamman, re: Wolff
#6
Posted 2011-November-14, 08:41
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
Our ultimate goal on defense is to know by trick two or three everyone's hand at the table. -- Mike777
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
#7
Posted 2011-November-14, 14:15
"well, what are you taking it as?"
"I'm going to look at my hand and the auction, and guess. I hope I guess right."
"but which way are you going?"
"you have our full agreements as I believe it; you are not entitled to the contents of my hand."
Any further questions will be replied to by a call to the TD to get the right solution. I have the same attitude to "so, is the 6 high or low?" (although I have been known to reply passive-aggressively to that with "don't know. Depends on what you hold in that suit.")
#8
Posted 2011-November-14, 14:20
mycroft, on 2011-November-14, 14:15, said:
"That's for both of us to figure out," is my honest reply when asked that.
"...we live off being battle-scarred veterans who manage to hate our opponents slightly more than we hate each other. -- Hamman, re: Wolff
#9
Posted 2011-November-14, 18:09
campboy, on 2011-November-14, 07:57, said:
You certainly do not have, but the Director has. And IMHO he should in a situation like this order the player who is unable to give a full explanation away from the table while his partner explains what he thinks is the partnership understanding.
#10
Posted 2011-November-14, 19:37
pran, on 2011-November-14, 18:09, said:
That still wouldn't be getting partner to leave the table, that would be getting *you* to leave the table. Not that it applies here anyway, since you can give a full explanation of relevant partnership agreements.
#11
Posted 2011-November-15, 00:16
campboy, on 2011-November-14, 19:37, said:
That assumes that you're correct about your partnership agreements. Maybe partner thinks that it's clear which meta-agreement was supposed to apply.
#12
Posted 2011-November-17, 04:35
#13
Posted 2011-November-17, 05:28
Prior to last tournament we had played 3♣ opening as trasnfer to diamonds, but right now we were playing 3♣ as natural club preempt.
partner opened 3♣ and I had something like:
♠KQx
♥AQx
♦x
♣AQxxxx
#14
Posted 2011-November-17, 14:27
If you have partnership experience that indicates that partner sometimes forgets an agreement, you should disclose it. But partner doesn't have a history of forgetting this agreement, because it's a new one.
You DO have knowledge that this is a new agreement, so you could feel it appropriate to warn the opponents. But the only reason you suspect this is because of your hand, not an explicit agreement or partnership experience (unless they've messed up for the first few weeks every time you've changed agreements).
#15
Posted 2011-November-18, 07:21
This shows clubs, but before this tournament it showed diamonds, my hand says he is very likelly to have forgotten the new agreement, and I am gonan bid in a way that covers to a maximum both posibilities.
#16
Posted 2011-November-18, 07:43
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
Our ultimate goal on defense is to know by trick two or three everyone's hand at the table. -- Mike777
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
#17
Posted 2011-November-22, 08:04
If they ask me what I think, I'll say that I think they should've prealerted.
If they ask me what I think it is, I'll say that's irrelevant.
#18
Posted 2011-November-22, 09:07
Free, on 2011-November-22, 08:04, said:
If they ask me what I think, I'll say that I think they should've prealerted.
If they ask me what I think it is, I'll say that's irrelevant.
Sorry Free but this is just wrong. If the local authority requires a pre-alert then by all means warn them that you will be calling the Director if you feel there might have been damage from the lack of pre-alert, or even call the Director immediately, but you are not allowed to refuse to give the opponents full disclosure of any relevant agreements.
#19
Posted 2011-November-22, 11:15
I would be calling the TD as soon as they question my "we have no agreement about this call that requires a Pre-Alert we didn't get" - frankly, I'd probably be calling the TD as soon as the non-Pre-Alerted call was made.
My line might be "we needed to agree on a defence to it, and have been denied the ability to do so"; it might be "we have a defence to this, and would have quickly reviewed it had we been told at the correct time - I don't remember it right now, though"; it might be "you have to provide a defence - where is it?"; it might be "we have <agreement> over <this similar call>." (and in response to "how are you taking it", I think Free has it right).
#20
Posted 2011-November-22, 15:40
Zelandakh, on 2011-November-22, 09:07, said:
You're exactly right, you have to disclose your agreements. However, apparently we don't have any relevant agreement! Having 2 different agreements is the the same as having none. I'm not going to give my opponents the wrong information. If opponents insist I'll call the Director, no problem. There's no reason to warn opponents for whatever reason. Either they follow the rules, or they don't. When I'm in doubt, I call the Director and he'll sort it out.
Now there are only 2 agreements, but what if you have 4?
- natural
- inv+ with fit
- values
- takeout
You might as well explain partner can have any possible hand without the ♦K and be right more often than not...

Help
