bluejak, on 2011-January-01, 13:10, said:
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You get in a self protecting position because and only because regulators put you there in an effort to protect the guilty.
This is completely baseless and does not follow from anything you have said. There are UI Laws, and if you do not follow them you have not followed the Law. That applies whatever causes the UI, whether bad luck, bad timing, involuntary exclamations, poor regulations, unfortunate consequences of good or bad regulations, and so forth. The suggestion that a person is in such a position because the regulators try to protect the guilty is just ridiculous.
Do you understand at all what the self protecting requirement leads to and what I am talking about? I don't think so.
Suppose you have a nice spade suit and you hear the bidding start on your left: 1
♥-Pass-3
♠-??
The bid has not been alerted. Opponents bid to a heart contract (whether game or slam hardly matters) and before the opening lead the intended dummy says that 3
♠ should have been alerted. You call the TD. He says play the board, call me back if necessary. The opponents make their heart contract, but it turns out you had a nice save in spades. You call the TD back and say that you would have doubled 3
♠ to suggest a save. The ruling: "Well, everybody plays splinters, and you're experienced enough, so you should know that this was most likely a splinter. The regulations say that you have to protect yourself by asking. Result stands."
Next round. Miraculously, you hold a nice spade suit and the auction starts at your left: 1
♥-Pass-3
♠-??. Again, no alert. You have learnt, though, and you ask what it means. The opener tells you, slightly irritated: "A hand with a good spade suit, of course. Did you see any alert?". How the auction continues is irrelevant. Your partner has UI that suggests you have something in spades. And partner is limited in his options.
Why is partner limited in his options? Not because of any irregularity by your side. And also not because of any irregularity by the opponents. He is limited because of the irregularity
at the other table. Just because this irregularity (sloppy alerting of "obviously alertable" bids) happens so often, regulators have thought that it would be a good idea to protect those sloppy alerters (which I call "the guilty") from Secretary Birds. But, as a result, they forced the NOP to protect themselves, which leaves the NOP at a considerable disadvantage when it was actually correct to not alert the bid.
I hope that this makes my statement pretty clear.
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You get in a self protecting position (at a table) because and only because regulators put you there in an effort to protect the guilty (the sloppy alerters at an other table).
Rik
P.S. The actual case was even worse. There was no alert (1). East protected himself against potential MI. South claimed the bid was natural (2). That brought EW in the "self protecting UI situation". Then North used the UI from South's explanation by bidding 5
♥, rather than taking 4
♠ as showing the
♠A and following up with the obvious 4NT bid (3). And then, on top of that, it becomes clear that 3
♠ actually did require an alert and was explained wrong.
Now, west led a spade. And now, after
at least (we still don't have any info about who corrected what when) three irregularities by NS (2x MI and 1 x use of UI) you are jumping on West's spade lead because it was based on UI. The UI that West wouldn't have had if either NS would have followed the rules or the regulators would not have forced East to protect himself.
I want my opponents to leave my table with a smile on their face and without matchpoints on their score card - in that order.
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the new discoveries, is not “Eureka!” (I found it!), but “That’s funny…” – Isaac Asimov
The only reason God did not put "Thou shalt mind thine own business" in the Ten Commandments was that He thought that it was too obvious to need stating. - Kenberg
Result: 11 tricks, Spade lead
The 3S was initially not alerted. At East's turn to call he asked about 3S, was told it was "Natural and preemptive" (which, the eagle-eyed among you will note, is alertable in the EBU. It was meant as a splinter) and then passed. The auction continued to 5H doubled, which on the lead of a spade (to the hand that asked about 3S) rather than the normal club made 11 tricks. East/West then called the director to point out the possible unauthorised information from the explanation.
I'll post the ruling that was eventually reached later.