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TD gave 60/40 right explanation but p forgot system

#1 User is offline   42 

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Posted 2005-September-08, 02:37

Hi all!

RHO opens 1 and with
KQxxx
xx
AJxxxx
-

I bid 2, alerted and explained as 2-suiter with both majors, which is what we discussed 1 week before but I forgot and bid as usually: 2-suiter with s and any.

The full bidding:
1 2! dbl 3
dbl pass 4 pass
5
Opps had a slam in hearts and TD was called who adjusted the score to 60/40 for the ladies. Is that decision right?

Caren
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#2 User is offline   whereagles 

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Posted 2005-September-08, 02:44

An adjustment is correct (the misinformation caused damage), but I think 60/40 was wrong. An adjustment to 6H just made was probably the correct ruling, but I'd have to check law 12 to be sure.
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#3 User is offline   Blofeld 

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  Posted 2005-September-08, 06:28

Why is an adjustment correct? There has been no misinformation.

There was a misbid (2), but there's no reason to think that this was fielded by partner. Nor has being reminded of what your bid actually means (as opposed to what you wanted it to mean) affected your later bidding: you were always going to pass.

So I think no adjustment.
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#4 User is offline   LH2650 

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Posted 2005-September-08, 07:00

What is your real agreement? If you have a convention card, or other evidence that you have agreed that your bid shows the majors, then no adjustment. If there is doubt about your agreement, then the Director should assume misexplanation rather than misbid, and adjust the score.
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#5 User is offline   whereagles 

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Posted 2005-September-08, 07:03

Oh.. sorry, I misunderstood it. There was, in fact, no misinformation, so result should stand.
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#6 User is online   jillybean 

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Posted 2005-September-08, 07:15

Please can you post all the hands?
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#7 User is offline   helene_t 

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Posted 2005-September-08, 07:30

LH2650, on Sep 8 2005, 03:00 PM, said:

What is your real agreement? If you have a convention card, or other evidence that you have agreed that your bid shows the majors, then no adjustment. If there is doubt about your agreement, then the Director should assume misexplanation rather than misbid, and adjust the score.

This is true in general, but since mistakes related to two-suiter showing calls happen very often, the director may assume wrong explanation anyway.

At least, that's the answer you often get in such cases in the ask-the-director pages in the Dutch BF magazine.
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#8 Guest_Jlall_*

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Posted 2005-September-08, 07:40

The burden of proof is on you to prove that it was a misbid and not a misexplanation. If you could not do this, the director was correct.
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#9 User is offline   pigpenz 

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Posted 2005-September-08, 08:20

if you did indeed say it shows majors there should be no adjustment as your partner bid accordingly to your agreement.
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#10 User is offline   candybar 

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Posted 2005-September-08, 08:31

jillybean2, on Sep 8 2005, 08:15 AM, said:

Please can you post all the hands?

The actual hands are totally irrelevant. Was there misexplanation of the agreement (then adjust), or a misbid by someone who forgot the actual agreement (then no adjustment).
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#11 User is offline   Chamaco 

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Posted 2005-September-08, 09:05

I was playing with Caren:

I alerted the cuebid as "Michaels cuebid", 55+ in majors, either weak or reverse.

The original agreement, that we had used in a previous tournament, was that the cuebid would be Michaels.

However, Caren had forgot that agreement (she has so many partners who all play different systems ! Easy to forget agreement then! That's the fate of nice people who are very requested as partner on the market :D ).

I have to say, though, that we had filled the simplified convention card provided by the local club, BUT there was no space available to fill for defensive bidding, so the agreement was not explicitly written down on the convention card :)
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#12 User is online   jillybean 

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Posted 2005-September-08, 09:17

candybar, on Sep 8 2005, 07:31 AM, said:

jillybean2, on Sep 8 2005, 08:15 AM, said:

Please can you post all the hands?

The actual hands are totally irrelevant. Was there misexplanation of the agreement (then adjust), or a misbid by someone who forgot the actual agreement (then no adjustment).

sigh

I'd like to see them. Not because I necessarily disagree with what people have said about the ruling, just out of general interest.
"And no matter what methods you play, it is essential, for anyone aspiring to learn to be a good player, to learn the importance of bidding shape properly. MikeH
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#13 Guest_Jlall_*

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Posted 2005-September-08, 09:36

candybar, on Sep 8 2005, 09:31 AM, said:

The actual hands are totally irrelevant. Was there misexplanation of the agreement (then adjust), or a misbid by someone who forgot the actual agreement (then no adjustment).

It's true that is the question. Getting the answer is hard. No disrespect to 42 or Chamaco, but the statement that "we had just changed our agreement and I forgot" is self serving. I know that they are honest, but the director does not. This statement alone is not enough to make a ruling on. If they have some kind of system documentation, that would be good enough. We do not have enough information to know if the ruling was correct, did you give any evidence to support your claim of a misbid?
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#14 User is offline   Chamaco 

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Posted 2005-September-08, 09:53

Jlall, on Sep 8 2005, 03:36 PM, said:

did you give any evidence to support your claim of a misbid?

We did not even try.
The director told us that the italian rules TOTALLY forbid psyching a conventional overcall, and he considered this as if it was a psyche.

from my perspective, I did not know whether we were wrong or right, but I thought after all it was not unfair to receive a penalty.

Caren knows the bridge rules better than me, but nevertheless she did not try to argue with an italiann director, given the language barrier.

We just accepted it and moved on.
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#15 User is offline   mycroft 

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Posted 2005-September-08, 14:36

Forgetting agreements on 2-suited overcalls are a major problem worldwide, especially in Europe where Ghestem (where cuebid, 2NT and 3C show the three two-suiters; unfortunately, there is inconsistency on which bid shows which 2-suiter) holds sway.

An excellent overview of the fun that 2-suited overcalls get the mixup side into is from one David Burn - note especially the postscript.

However, in this case, the mixup frequently helps as much as it hurts - by effectively turning both the cuebid into "two suits, not both minors" and 3C into "two suits, not both minors, possibly weak with clubs" - especially when it is not explained that way - it makes future bidding by the opponents...difficult, at least. That is why in many places, including the WBF, that agreement - as an agreement, not as "forget Ghestem" - is legal only rarely.

Some federations (IIRC, the Dutch are one) have such trouble with mixups in 2-suiters that they have regulations that effectively say that in these situations, it's *always* misexplanation - i.e. the level of evidence required to tilt in favour of misbid is much higher than in "normal" cases. Possibly illegal - or at least possibly illegal phrased as it is - but effective, nonetheless.

If the FIGB has such a rule, then they can properly apply it absent sufficient (for their regulation) evidence.

Definately, it is legal for SOs to regulate conventions any way they like - and that specifically means they can state that you can use certain conventions provided you agree not to psych them. This may not be how a naive reader of the Laws would read Law 40, but at least two SOs have specifically asked the WBF for interpretation on this issue, and were told that they can regulate *anything* associated with conventional understandings.

However, the bid was *not* a psychic, and nothing anybody tries to do will make it one. From the definitions: " A deliberate and gross misstatement of honor strength or suit length." This was not deliberate, it was not a psychic.

Do I like the "assume misexplanation" rule? Not really, but mixups in two-suited overcall situations are always messy to one side or the other (or for the TD who has to try to explain why auctions like (1D)3C-3S; 4C "sorry partner, I forgot, I just have clubs" aren't legal with the UI from partner's explanation) - making this situation singularly unprofitable for the forgetters in an attempt to have it go away is a laudable goal. Whether it is currently legal, or if so, what Kaplanesque readings of the current Laws are required to make it legal, is another story altogether.

Michael.

P.S. Here is the WBF note on this aspect (from the EBU White Book):
A regulating authority has unrestricted powers to regulate conventions under this Law. For example, some authorities ban psyching particular conventional calls: this is legal.

However, applying penalties automatically to players who make mistakes in their use of Ghestem, while apparently legal under this Law, is not a good approach. Penalties should be applied in aggravated circumstances only, such as repeated misuse.
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#16 User is offline   pigpenz 

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Posted 2005-September-08, 16:47

candybar, on Sep 8 2005, 09:31 AM, said:

jillybean2, on Sep 8 2005, 08:15 AM, said:

Please can you post all the hands?

The actual hands are totally irrelevant. Was there misexplanation of the agreement (then adjust), or a misbid by someone who forgot the actual agreement (then no adjustment).

yes the hands are irrelevant! If the info was given as to what the partnership understanding is that is all that is necessary. The other hand bid accordingly. If there is constant misuse of this convention by this pair then a procedural penalty could be applied or the banning of them using this convention may be appropriate.
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#17 User is offline   luke warm 

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Posted 2005-September-08, 17:48

jilly kat already agreed that the hands were irrelevant to the ruling, she just wanted to see them out of curiousity... geez
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#18 User is offline   Chamaco 

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Posted 2005-September-09, 01:21

I had a flat 5 count, something like that

JTxx-xxx- Jxx- Kxx

but I do not really remember the hand, I just removed it from my mind :-)
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#19 User is offline   Brandal 

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Posted 2005-September-09, 04:47

42, on Sep 8 2005, 03:37 AM, said:

I bid 2, alerted and explained as 2-suiter with both majors, which is what we discussed 1 week before but I forgot and bid as usually: 2-suiter with s and any.

Caren

I'm probably missing something here....as usual :)

Was this a selfalert?

You forgot it shows majors when you bid but remember
to explain it as majors? ;)

If there was no selfalert/explanation forget I asked :)
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#20 User is offline   mila85 

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Posted 2005-September-09, 07:02

What tournament did you play? I read 'local club' but also 'language barrier'.

1. Online - this shouldn't happen because you selfalert.
2. Friendly tournament - accept the ruling because
- I want enjoy the game not argue with TD.
- Opps were damaged by misinformation. Maybe it was a misbid but when partner jumps to 3 (3 was lucky) you can always correct to 3 and he will understand (Even if the explanation was right it wasn't 'full' because you know your partner and you can recognize 'old agreement')
3. Normal tournament with normal cc. This should be in your cc and it can help you if you explain it correctly. (But when you correct 3 to 3 your partner must bid as it was strong)
4. Big big tournament - change the result to 6=. You MUST know this basic bidding situation.

I'm not TD and I do not know the rules very well. This is only my view.
Sorry, my english is not perfect :(
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