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Strange way of playing TOX

#1 User is offline   AL78 

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Posted 2020-November-27, 08:07

I've been having a discussion with one of my regular partners after enquiring how she and one of her other regular partners got to 5 on a competitive hand going six down. I have found out that this other partner insists on doubling over an opening bid as showing an opening strength hand, even when holding a biddable suit. This partner is an aggressive player and likes to overcall on hands which I suspect many on here wouldn't dream of doing, but I was wondering if anyone on here plays such a convention or has come across it?

For info, here is the hand.



I'm not certain of the auction beyond 4 so am guessing.
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#2 User is offline   Zelandakh 

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Posted 2020-November-27, 11:39

View PostAL78, on 2020-November-27, 08:07, said:

I was wondering if anyone on here plays such a convention or has come across it?

One comes across this in two contexts. The first and most common is players that simply do not know any better. They double with any opening bid for the same reason that UK novices overcall 1NT with a balanced 12-14.

The second case is gadget lovers or quite good players who are using some variation of the overcall structure, where a double shows a good hand and other calls are weaker.

My guess is that your regular partner falls into the former category but may be wrong. Either way, if her agreement is as it is then that is probably alertable if you play in a jurisdiction where doubles are not self-alerting (such as online). If asked, it certainly needs to be made clear that it is not a standard takeout double. If she refuses to disclose her agreement as unusual, she is essentially cheating. I personally would not play with a partner that knowingly did that.
(-: Zel :-)
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#3 User is offline   spotlight7 

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Posted 2020-November-27, 11:43

This was much like the style of some Italian players in the 60s.

Blue Team Club players overcalled @3-12HCP and doubled with 13+.

Responder was not supposed to expect more than 2 cards support

in any given suit after a double.
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#4 User is offline   Tramticket 

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Posted 2020-November-27, 15:49

View PostZelandakh, on 2020-November-27, 11:39, said:

Either way, if her agreement is as it is then that is probably alertable if you play in a jurisdiction where doubles are not self-alerting (such as online).


This ought to be so. But in England, the EBU has completely watered down the regulation. You don't need to alert take out doubles and there is no shape requirement for a take-out double - just the requirement that the doubler wishes to compete and partner is expected to bid but might pass.

You can expect no sympathy from an English director when an opponent makes one of these bizarre doubles.
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#5 User is offline   blackshoe 

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Posted 2020-November-27, 15:58

Well, I'm glad I don't play in England any more, then.
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#6 User is online   mycroft 

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Posted 2020-November-27, 16:17

Or in the US I guess - the ACBL got rid of the Alert for "minimum offshape doubles" years ago.

You can check my history - I got caught by it at least twice here before the memory stuck.
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#7 User is offline   Zelandakh 

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Posted 2020-November-28, 10:52

View PostTramticket, on 2020-November-27, 15:49, said:

This ought to be so. But in England, the EBU has completely watered down the regulation. You don't need to alert take out doubles and there is no shape requirement for a take-out double - just the requirement that the doubler wishes to compete and partner is expected to bid but might pass.

In that case a simple Double of a 1suit opening bid should be regarded as self-alerting in England. Regardless of the alert, if asked an accurate description should be given. A simple description of "takeout" here should be regarded as MI - hopefully Gordon will confirm.
(-: Zel :-)
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#8 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2020-December-01, 10:12

The problem with expecting people who "don't know any better" to alert is that they think it's standard. They're just copying what they've seen other players do, and it gets passed along like this, all of them thinking it's normal.

If they knew it was inappropriate they probably wouldn't make the bids in the first place.

It really is for takeout since they expect partner to bid -- they just don't concern themselves with the followups if partner bids their short suit.

#9 User is offline   mcphee 

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Posted 2020-December-01, 10:50

Clearly the player has no idea about the game.
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#10 User is offline   Vampyr 

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Posted 2020-December-01, 12:24

View Postmycroft, on 2020-November-27, 16:17, said:

Or in the US I guess - the ACBL got rid of the Alert for "minimum offshape doubles" years ago.


Yes, so did the EBU. It is a real shame; why make players ask every time an opponent makes a simple takeout double.

A long time ago I read a book by Terence Reese; There was a hand where he considered overcalling, but since it had opening strength he elected to double. There is a reason why such methods have fallen out of favour…
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#11 User is online   mycroft 

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Posted 2020-December-01, 13:43

Mostly because, as everyone is mentioning here, and elsewhere, the people who play this don't realize it's unusual. Therefore, they don't know they would have to Alert it. In fact, they would wonder why, with a 16-count with 6 spades, you bid 1 - nobody they know would do that, they would double. Why aren't you Alerting?

Do I like this? No. But it's just the same as everything else where there are multiple common possibilities all not Alertable (or all Alertable, for that matter).
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#12 User is offline   Tramticket 

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Posted 2020-December-01, 16:44

I don't buy this argument that the EBU can't regulate because: "they don't know any better".

Players who open a Benji 2C on an 8-card suit headed by AKQJ and nothing else also don't know what they're doing, but the EBU is determined to twist and turn into all sorts of ridiculous contortions to ban this practice. It is far easier to define a take-out double than a Benji 2C and they could require an alert - if they had the will.

Maybe these players would have a better understanding if their national body gave a clearer direction.
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#13 User is offline   helene_t 

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Posted 2020-December-01, 17:05

The idea that a double "shows an opening hand" is also extremely widespread in the Netherlands.

Probably some teachers and textbooks defined a t/o double as something like "opening strength with tolerance for all unbid suits OR a very strong hand" and an overcall as "could be less than opening strength", and then somehow it became too complicated for some so they just abbreviated it to "double=opening, overcall=less than opening".
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#14 User is offline   akwoo 

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Posted 2020-December-01, 18:25

View Posthelene_t, on 2020-December-01, 17:05, said:

The idea that a double "shows an opening hand" is also extremely widespread in the Netherlands.

Probably some teachers and textbooks defined a t/o double as something like "opening strength with tolerance for all unbid suits OR a very strong hand" and an overcall as "could be less than opening strength", and then somehow it became too complicated for some so they just abbreviated it to "double=opening, overcall=less than opening".


1) It is too complicated for some players.

2) How much do you lose playing this way? I'm guessing, on 100 boards, you lose on 5 and gain on 2 playing this way? That's way too small a difference for casual bridge players to notice or care about. Most players lose way more boards not noticing that their side suit is good or forgetting what declarer's last card is.

3) A requirement to alert is a non-starter, because when you tell a life novice that they have to alert some agreement because other players don't play it that way, you're effectively telling them that they're playing the game wrong. They might know they're not good players, but they don't want to be told that.
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#15 User is offline   helene_t 

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Posted 2020-December-01, 20:06

View Postakwoo, on 2020-December-01, 18:25, said:

2) How much do you lose playing this way? I'm guessing, on 100 boards, you lose on 5 and gain on 2 playing this way? That's way too small a difference for casual bridge players to notice or care about. Most players lose way more boards not noticing that their side suit is good or forgetting what declarer's last card is.

Probably you lose a lot less. And for some pairs, playing unplayable methods may even be a long-term winner. Some of those pairs also play that reverses don't show extras, that a 1NT opening promises a stopper in each suit, and that 4 is always Gerber. I don't expect any of those agreement to lose more than 0.2%/board or so at MP, either.

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A requirement to alert is a non-starter

Absolutely. Even if they could be taught that t/o doubles that just show opening strength is alertable, it doesn't serve much of a purpose anyway. A realistic goal of club-level alert regulations is to get people to alert artificial conventions where a natural treatment is the norm, for example multi and Verdi. Many club players are averse to alerting because they find that it doesn't help opps but only serves to brag about sophisticated systems and to pass UI to partner.

I would suggest a course in rules and ethics for those who aspire to play in external competition, but at the club level you'll have to enforce more liberal rules. It's good to have a discussion about this with players at different levels, though, since at some clubs, many will disagree. And if it turns out that there's a general wanting for playing by the EBU rules, then by all means go for it.
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#16 User is offline   TylerE 

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Posted 2020-December-01, 21:52

The problem here isn't the whacky double.

It's East taking *3* free bids on a ratty 4 count.
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#17 User is offline   Vampyr 

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Posted 2020-December-02, 00:31

View Posthelene_t, on 2020-December-01, 20:06, said:

Probably you lose a lot less. And for some pairs, playing unplayable methods may even be a long-term winner. Some of those pairs also play that reverses don't show extras, that a 1NT opening promises a stopper in each suit, and that 4 is always Gerber. I don't expect any of those agreement to lose more than 0.2%/board or so at MP, either.


And being on the other side of these actions often costs a lot.
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#18 User is offline   johnu 

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Posted 2020-December-02, 01:21

View Postspotlight7, on 2020-November-27, 11:43, said:

This was much like the style of some Italian players in the 60s.

Blue Team Club players overcalled @3-12HCP and doubled with 13+.

Responder was not supposed to expect more than 2 cards support

in any given suit after a double.

As Avon Wilsmore noted in his book The Case Against the Blue Team, those offshape doubles worked much better when partner knows the doubler's shape.
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#19 User is offline   Tramticket 

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Posted 2020-December-02, 01:58

View Postakwoo, on 2020-December-01, 18:25, said:

How much do you lose playing this way? I'm guessing, on 100 boards, you lose on 5 and gain on 2 playing this way?


I am prepared to accept these numbers. But ...

I suggest that they ought to lose more than 5. But they never seem to end in the ridiculous contract because their partner always seems to have a justification not to bid 4M, despite holding a five-card suit. They might be "life novices", but they do know what type of hand partner will hold and bid on that assumption. Is it unreasonable that we should also know?

Most of their two gains will occur when they don't win the auction, declarer makes a plan based on the likely suit distribution. The plan would be different if properly informed.
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#20 User is offline   Tramticket 

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Posted 2020-December-02, 02:03

View Posthelene_t, on 2020-December-01, 20:06, said:

I would suggest a course in rules and ethics for those who aspire to play in external competition, but at the club level you'll have to enforce more liberal rules. It's good to have a discussion about this with players at different levels, though, since at some clubs, many will disagree. And if it turns out that there's a general wanting for playing by the EBU rules, then by all means go for it.


But the strange thing is that they are playing by the EBU rules and they can (and do) continue to do this in external competitions. A course in rules and ethics will be ineffective if the rules are poorly drafted.
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