paulg, on 2011-February-09, 03:33, said:
I am struggling with the logic that:
- A pair has lots of detailed agreements over a short club, but perhaps not in this precise sequence.
- One of the pair then makes a Michaels cue bid in clubs, vulnerable against not, with a weak hand opposite a partner who could not overcall 1♣, fully aware that his partner may not understand it.
- The cue bidder then decides that his partner did not understand his Michaels bid and sacrifices at unfavourable vulnerability
- The fact that his partner did not alert Michaels is because they have no explicit agreement about this sequence, so cue bidder is allowed to do what he likes
Firstly, I think that bidding 2
♣ with no hope of partner understanding it is madness and I believe it shows that the bidder expects his partner to understand it. Either this round or next, there is the expectation that partner will understand it as showing the majors and this implies partnership agreement.
If your partner had alerted 2
♣, as you would expect, then you would never consider bidding again. If you were playing with screens you would not be bidding again. Without screens I wonder if your partner hesitated before deciding whether to alert or not - my guess is that any lack of hesitation also suggests that your partner thought that 2
♣ was natural - when you make an unusual call that may be alertable, partners usually think about alerting.
I would definitely rule against you, give you a PP and keep your deposit if you appealed.
Apologies for the lack of sympathy especially as you did start the thread against yourself. I just feel it is more blatant than you considered it, although I appreciate that these matters are always a lot more difficult at the table.
I started this thread because I wanted to know how people would view it, and what the right decision was.
I think you're slightly misunderstanding the position.
I was 100% clear my bid was two suited, as I thought the 1N bid 100% showed clubs.
Partner who was probably more au fait with opps system, decided it didn't and hence was sure 2
♣ was natural. Although with no UI, he can do what he likes in response to this.
The only issue is what I do over 3N. I described my thought process earlier, partner hasn't passed over 2
♣X as a suggestion to play, so doesn't have any real length there or bid 2
♦, and honours he has are well placed, and it sounds like he has some sort of real fit in an auction where he wouldn't necessarily bounce it due to the vulnerability. I assessed this on the basis that he had alerted 2
♣, and also on the Zia principle that when you're having one of those days where you clearly have the Midas touch, keep going with your instinct so I did (we were in the process of putting together a card that was 20-0 just on our card in a 32 board teams of 8 match).
That partner hasn't overcalled is a red herring, we tend to jump overcall on tram tickets, and a simple overcall is opening bid +. Also it seems that partner's spades are only 10 high at best (given the 3N bid), so that would make it a pretty unattractive overcall.