hrothgar, on Jul 27 2005, 01:57 AM, said:
Personally, I think that a Heart is a Spade, at least when NT openings are involved. I don't have any firm figures in front of me, but I'd be willing to bet that the percentage of players to respond 2♠ to 1NT with 5+ Spades is pretty damn small. I'd certainly consider it infrequent enough to be unexpected.
Sorry to inform you, but alerting rules are NOT based on what you personally think, or what majority of users of BBO think, or what some statistics on BBO will prove to be major treatment.
I don't know the exact wording of ACBL alerting rules, but I assume that it will quite similar to what is used in other countries:
You have to alert bids that are not "natural" in the sense of showing length in the suit bid or interest to play in this suit.
You have to alert bids that are not "natural" in the sense of not being the next longest suit. (yes, 1
♣-1
♥ SHOULD be alerted if you can have longer
♦ than
♥!)
(and yes, in most of Europe you HAVE to alert SAYC minor openings.)
You have to alert bids that carry additional information, which is not expected in "natural" meaning of the bid. (Same example, also inverted raises etc.)
Only after this comes the requirement to alert bids with unusual/unexpected meaning - but this does not mean "I expect everyone to play transfers so I will not alert trasnfers and will alert my natural bids". This means that you have to alert "forcing passes", you have to alert bids that are unexpectedly forcing or nonforcing.
I know these rules are not perfect, but they have to be obeyed.
We all know that these rules will evolve slowly. Almost everybody uses Stayman and a simple Stayman is one of the few exceptions from alerts. When the NATIONAL authorities feel that transfers became significantly major treatment, they will change the rules (as they have done with better minor openings in the US).
But, BBO is international, despite situated in the US, and this means that it's rules should follow WBF rules unless directly specified (ACBL tourneys).
Bridge cannot be ruled by local majority customs. This would mean that any Polish player going to BBO would have to study whole lot of (for him artifical) bids that his opponents will not alert.
Our goal should be to make the game enjoyable to everyone - and following a GLOBAL set of rules is the easiest way.