aguahombre, on 2011-December-31, 17:42, said:
There must be something wrong with the "reading" or with the wording of the regulations themselves if the following two things are both true:
1---People who treat reverses (after 1/1) as not necessarily extra strength, and don't know any better are required to alert what the rest of us think is highly unusual.
2---People who know what they are doing and will open 1-4-3-5 one diamond are not required to alert what the rest of us think is highly unusual.
Being prepared for a forcing club system does not, should not, require the opponents to know all that it entails. And TD's who believe the opponents should totally fend for themselves opposite a forcing club system are practicing favoritism/elitist thinking if they are the same ones who insist weak players doing what little they know should be held to a standard they know little about.
I don't know if that is what the regulation says but it seems pretty unreasonable that a player who has never heard or understood a reverse should be required to alert it. Against players whose methods I am unfamiliar with I routinely ask about the auction before the play and if necessary during the auction when there has been a 'reverse' to protect myself - its general bridge knowledge that a large number of players do not play reverses.
1
♦ on 1=4=3=5 is not just 3+ it is a canape method. The alert procedures in ACBL albeit under 1
♥/
♠ openings says "Note that canapé systems must be pre-Alerted and canapé bids must also be Alerted during the auction."
I suppose that you can argue that one bid does not make your system canape but the language changes from canape systems to canape bids when changing from prealerts to alerts.
I think that there is a strong case that such a 1
♦ should be alerted.
As a player for me the bottom line is would I be happy getting a good score because the opponents don't understand my methods. No I wouldn't. Therefore I have an obligation to disclose this. The alert procedures also say "The objective of the Alert system is for both pairs at the table to have equal access to all information contained in any auction." An advantage gained in this way comes because both pairs did not have "equal access to all information".