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What is fielding? Read it at the psychs topic

#21 User is offline   nige1 

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Posted 2008-December-04, 18:53

TimG, on Dec 4 2008, 03:08 PM, said:

This was discussed on rgb a few months ago.  I was told:
"As has been discussed before, the most common meaning of fielding is
'illegally allowing for partner's action' and the EBU defines it as such."
Further inquiry revealed that "legal fielding" would be referred to as "allowing for".

IMO, it depends on what information, the psycher's partner used to diagnose the psych (as judged by the director on consultation with the alleged fielder's peers).
  • A player who diagnoses the psych only from his hand and the auction, may legally allow for the psych. IMO, Echognome is right that, a priori, it is more than twice as likely that one of your random flaky opponents has psyched or made a mistake than your reliable expert partner.
  • A player who additionally uses knowledge of his partner's habits or other unauthorised information to diagnose and cater for a psych, (illegally) fields that psych. One problem is that habitual psychers tend to fall into patterns of behaviour. Frequent psychers tend to have distinct preferences for certain situations and certain holdings over others. It is hard for a regular partner to avoid becoming familiar with this pattern. These preferences may be as individual as a fingerprint. For example what player do you associate with psychic exclusion KCB? With opening 1 whenever he holds 0-3 HCP? Other examples:
    • When losing a match by some critical margin.
    • When you're non-vulnerable.
    • After opponent's strong artificial opener.
    • Opening a three-card major, third-in-hand.
    • 1N Overcall that has values for a weak-two.
    • When partner opens and RHO your doubles, attempt to pick off opponents' suit.
    • False trial-bids and cue-bids.

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#22 User is offline   gnasher 

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Posted 2008-December-04, 19:17

blackshoe, on Dec 4 2008, 04:05 PM, said:

The EBU has regulations about psychics and fielding (and also fielding of misbids or deviations).

Yes. And I'd recommend that anyone seeking a sensible definition or explanation of "fielding" a psyche should look somewhere else. This section of the EBU's regulations is awful.
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#23 User is offline   kenrexford 

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Posted 2008-December-04, 20:37

matmat, on Dec 4 2008, 05:51 PM, said:

dealer. W/R. imps.

J62 Q543 7 KJ642

P - (1) - 1N - (X)
P - ( P ) - 2 - (2)
3 - (X) - 3 - (P)
?

are you fielding? if so, what and how?

If someone has made a psychic call, which may be the case, I could not field this if I tried. I have no earthly idea what the heck is going on in this mess of an auction.
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#24 User is offline   jdonn 

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Posted 2008-December-04, 20:43

kenrexford, on Dec 4 2008, 09:37 PM, said:

matmat, on Dec 4 2008, 05:51 PM, said:

dealer. W/R. imps.

J62 Q543 7 KJ642

P - (1) - 1N - (X)
P - ( P ) - 2 - (2)
3 - (X) - 3 -  (P)
?

are you fielding? if so, what and how?

If someone has made a psychic call, which may be the case, I could not field this if I tried. I have no earthly idea what the heck is going on in this mess of an auction.

I have never agreed with you more!
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#25 User is offline   MFA 

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Posted 2008-December-05, 08:37

matmat, on Dec 4 2008, 05:51 PM, said:

dealer. W/R. imps.

J62 Q543 7 KJ642

P - (1) - 1N - (X)
P - ( P ) - 2 - (2)
3 - (X) - 3 -  (P)
?

are you fielding? if so, what and how?

Pass, wtp?

When partner runs from a penalty double, it means that he doesn't want to play in the strain where he was doubled. Nothing tricky about that.
I don't know what he has now but that is obviously his problem.
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#26 User is offline   helene_t 

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Posted 2008-December-05, 09:01

Suppose opps have "we never psych" on their CC while we have "we frequently psych". This means that whenever there are 60 HCPs and 17 spades in the deck, everyone will assume that either I or my p has psyched, right?

I don't see problem with that. Of course it may be appropriate to specify which particular calls we are more likely to psych, and maybe alert those.
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#27 User is offline   Hanoi5 

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Posted 2008-December-05, 09:20

I think that's precisely the problem. A psych can't be alerted. Or can it?

 wyman, on 2012-May-04, 09:48, said:

Also, he rates to not have a heart void when he leads the 3.


 rbforster, on 2012-May-20, 21:04, said:

Besides playing for fun, most people also like to play bridge to win


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#28 User is offline   blackshoe 

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Posted 2008-December-05, 09:42

Hanoi5, on Dec 5 2008, 11:20 AM, said:

I think that's precisely the problem. A psych can't be alerted. Or can it?

Terminology. A call which deviates grossly and deliberately from a partnership's agreed meaning is a psych. A call which has a meaning the partnership understands which includes such gross deviations from the stated agreement is a CPU if the deviant meanings are not disclosed IAW the regulations of the RA. If you include the "deviation(s)" in the agreed meaning(s), it's an explicit agreement.

One is entitled to ask questions of an opponent about agreements and understandings as to meanings of calls (see Law 20). Custom has extended this to, for example, psyching tendencies, but the law does not require explanation of those.

The purpose of an alert is to suggest that an opponent ask questions about the meaning of a call. One should not alert in situations where the response would be a matter of "general bridge knowledge" (such as "in this position psychs are quite common"). The ACBL regulation tells you to alert agreements. It (quite properly) says nothing about alerting psychs.

I think that if you are alerting particular calls with the intent of explaining them as "possibly a psych", then either you are attempting to "teach bridge", or they are not psychs at all - you have a partnership understanding to deviate grossly from your nominal "agreement". If the latter is the case, not only can you alert it, you should alert it. You should also put the full agreement, including deviations, on your CC.
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#29 User is offline   Hanoi5 

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Posted 2008-December-05, 10:16

I had some students bid this way:

1 Pass 1 Pass
1 1NT!

Opener and responder asked the 1nt bidder partner for the meaning of such bid. In the end my student said it was a psych but this sort of bid isn't in the system at all, what should she have said when asked? What should the Director have done?

 wyman, on 2012-May-04, 09:48, said:

Also, he rates to not have a heart void when he leads the 3.


 rbforster, on 2012-May-20, 21:04, said:

Besides playing for fun, most people also like to play bridge to win


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#30 User is offline   helene_t 

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Posted 2008-December-05, 10:22

The 1NT bidders partner should be taught only to explain special partnership understanding. She should not try to use her imagination or general bridge knowledge to explain partner's call. "No agreement" is a perfectly valid explanation, if there is in fact no special agreement covering this 1NT call.

Opps should be taught not to insist on getting explanations for obscure calls. If it appears that there is no agreement they should just say "thank you".
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#31 User is offline   kenrexford 

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Posted 2008-December-05, 11:31

helene_t, on Dec 5 2008, 11:22 AM, said:

The 1NT bidders partner should be taught only to explain special partnership understanding. She should not try to use her imagination or general bridge knowledge to explain partner's call. "No agreement" is a perfectly valid explanation, if there is in fact no special agreement covering this 1NT call.

Opps should be taught not to insist on getting explanations for obscure calls. If it appears that there is no agreement they should just say "thank you".

My wife alerts this 1NT call when I make it. The explanation is simple -- "1NT has not been bid yet." This is the old "grabbit 1NT" call, eh? LOL
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#32 User is offline   dake50 

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Posted 2008-December-05, 11:42

Taking a sideline, isn't a player's STYLE also UNAUTHORIZED INFORMATION? I refer to an article comparing partnering Rash with partner Steady alters my bids.

I KNOW partner's STYLE; opponents do not. Ethics? Regular partnerships develop STYLE understandings. So should be / not challenged for their STYLE understandings? Do I 'field' a style bid? Frequent WOTSY(We're-out-to-screw-you) bids -- fielded psych or just WOTSY deviations?

Not just sanctioning body's rules, but I seek ethics opinions.
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#33 User is offline   kenrexford 

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Posted 2008-December-05, 11:50

This could be a funny pre-alert, Dake:

"Pre-alert! My partner is a very poor bidder, as a result of which I often have no idea what he is doing and act accordingly."

"Pre-alert! My partner is an idiot, and I am a pompous ass. As a result, my 3NT bids are often attempts to play the hand."

"Pre-alert! My partner was drinking heavily last night, as a result of which I will know that his carding is often just plain stupid."

"Pre-alert! My partner is better at bridge than you and may make calls based upon an assumption that you do not have a clue how to defend."
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#34 User is offline   nige1 

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Posted 2008-December-05, 12:48

dake50, on Dec 5 2008, 12:42 PM, said:

Taking a sideline, isn't a player's STYLE  also UNAUTHORIZED INFORMATION?  I refer to an article comparing partnering Rash with partner Steady alters my bids. 

I KNOW partner's STYLE; opponents do not.  Ethics?  Regular partnerships develop STYLE understandings. So should be / not   challenged for their STYLE understandings?  Do I  'field' a style bid?  Frequent WOTSY(We're-out-to-screw-you) bids -- fielded psych or just WOTSY deviations?

Not just sanctioning body's rules, but I seek ethics opinions.

I agree with dake50.
  • Morally I'm sure he's right.
  • Legally, I believe that your habits and idiosyncrasies in the bidding and play are either disclosable or unauthorised informatiion. Since there is often no obvious method of disclosure, I think they are UI to partner.

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#35 User is offline   mycroft 

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Posted 2008-December-05, 15:38

2D(11-15)-2NT-X and you hold 18? Okay, that's rich, but if you held 10-14 or so, P(opener psyched) << P(partner psyched 2NT) (in most partnerships, at least) << P(opener forgot 2D was [flannery|intermediate] and has 6+6).

If you cater for "partner's playing games" over "opener forgot", two things happen:
- you'll probably get the score adjusted if partner did psych.
- you'll probably lose your partner if he didn't.

The third is that if you know the probabilities aren't as I wrote above, unless partner's Zia (whose tendencies are not exactly a well-kept secret), you're probably in concealed partnership understanding territory.

Now, if it's a question of "I know there's a psychic here, and it's 10-1 it's partner" that's iffy, but probably legal. But the example I modified is not at all clear, and really, am I not right about the forget?
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#36 User is offline   cherdano 

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Posted 2008-December-05, 15:43

mycroft, on Dec 5 2008, 03:38 PM, said:

2D(11-15)-2NT-X and you hold 18? Okay, that's rich, but if you held 10-14 or so, P(opener psyched) << P(partner psyched 2NT) (in most partnerships, at least) << P(opener forgot 2D was [flannery|intermediate] and has 6+6).

If you cater for "partner's playing games" over "opener forgot", two things happen:
- you'll probably get the score adjusted if partner did psych.
- you'll probably lose your partner if he didn't.

The third is that if you know the probabilities aren't as I wrote above, unless partner's Zia (whose tendencies are not exactly a well-kept secret), you're probably in concealed partnership understanding territory.

Now, if it's a question of "I know there's a psychic here, and it's 10-1 it's partner" that's iffy, but probably legal. But the example I modified is not at all clear, and really, am I not right about the forget?

Let's say this happened on BBO while I am playing with Zia. For the first time. I suspect it was Zia. You think that's evidence of a concealed partnership understanding???
Just knowing that partner psyches is different from knowing he tends to psych on certain specific auctions.
(The example is a bad one anyway. What do you bid if LHO forgot? Pass, if LHO doesn't wakeup we will score 2NX+several. What do you do if partner psyched? You pass so he can run.)
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#37 User is offline   Echognome 

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Posted 2008-December-05, 16:01

Arend - The answer is that it will obviously depend upon your agreements. Why wouldn't you, for example, redouble?
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#38 User is offline   nige1 

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Posted 2008-December-05, 16:10

cherdano, on Dec 5 2008, 04:43 PM, said:

Let's say this happened on BBO while I am playing with Zia. For the first time. I suspect it was Zia. You think that's evidence of a concealed partnership understanding???

If you suspect a psych and cater for it because your partner is Zia, I think you are guilty of using unauthorised information unless you are certain that opponents are equally aware of Zia's proclivities.
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#39 User is offline   kenrexford 

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Posted 2008-December-05, 16:16

nige1, on Dec 5 2008, 05:10 PM, said:

cherdano, on Dec 5 2008, 04:43 PM, said:

Let's say this happened on BBO while I am playing with Zia. For the first time. I suspect it was Zia. You think that's evidence of a concealed partnership understanding???

If you suspect a psych and cater for it because your partner is Zia, I think you are guilty of using unauthorised information unless you are certain that opponents are equally aware of Zia's proclivities.

Huh?

That's a stretch. I'm not sure curriculum vitae are required, just convention cards.
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#40 User is offline   barmar 

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Posted 2008-December-07, 17:46

blackshoe, on Dec 5 2008, 11:42 AM, said:

Hanoi5, on Dec 5 2008, 11:20 AM, said:

I think that's precisely the problem. A psych can't be alerted. Or can it?

Terminology. A call which deviates grossly and deliberately from a partnership's agreed meaning is a psych. A call which has a meaning the partnership understands which includes such gross deviations from the stated agreement is a CPU if the deviant meanings are not disclosed IAW the regulations of the RA. If you include the "deviation(s)" in the agreed meaning(s), it's an explicit agreement.

One is entitled to ask questions of an opponent about agreements and understandings as to meanings of calls (see Law 20). Custom has extended this to, for example, psyching tendencies, but the law does not require explanation of those.

The purpose of an alert is to suggest that an opponent ask questions about the meaning of a call. One should not alert in situations where the response would be a matter of "general bridge knowledge" (such as "in this position psychs are quite common"). The ACBL regulation tells you to alert agreements. It (quite properly) says nothing about alerting psychs.

I think that if you are alerting particular calls with the intent of explaining them as "possibly a psych", then either you are attempting to "teach bridge", or they are not psychs at all - you have a partnership understanding to deviate grossly from your nominal "agreement". If the latter is the case, not only can you alert it, you should alert it. You should also put the full agreement, including deviations, on your CC.

But what do say in the explanation, or put on the CC, regarding psyches? Unless there are very specific hand types he usually has when he psyches, what kind of meaningful disclosure can you provide?

Suppose you have a partner who psyches frequently, but you always try to respond as if he has the nominal meaning of the bid, until the rest of the auction makes it clear that it's unlikely. How much do you have to disclose if you always assume he's not psyching?

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