Disclosing partner's tendencies Tough ethical question - ABF
#1
Posted 2012-June-11, 18:05
The situation is
A) Partner has never pre-empted with 4 small in a suit before
B) I have pre-empted with 4 small in a suit fairly often.
C) I'm looking at the stiff Q of spades, so partner blatantly has done it this time
What's my disclosure requirement here? I think I said 'any 4/4 5/4 or 5/5 weaker than an opening hand is fine, we pre-empt aggressively' and they went wrong anyway, but it was a tough spot. What am I supposed to do?
Edit: Vvvvvv: I think it was an honest question, this was literally the first time ever they had encountered an Ekrens style assumed fit preempt.
#2
Posted 2012-June-11, 20:15
You do have to disclose partner's tendencies, not just what you have explicitly agreed. In theory it is ok to do so without looking at your hand, i.e. you could say that partner has never bid like this with four small even though you know he has exactly that. But I'd rather help the opponents out a little than have them go away thinking I am dishonest when I have no real way to prove otherwise.
#3
Posted 2012-June-11, 21:48
#4
Posted 2012-June-11, 22:27
aguahombre, on 2012-June-11, 21:48, said:
You may well be unfair to declarer with this statement. They may simply have not thought about the issue beforehand and are trying to work out the hand at this point. It would have been better to have asked beforehand, but if they have not done so, then they are entitled to the information now.
The OP's statement at the table was fine.
#5
Posted 2012-June-11, 23:48
sfi, on 2012-June-11, 22:27, said:
The OP's statement at the table was fine.
Yes, the OP's statement at the table was fine. Yes, they are entitled to disclosure. The question was legal AND tacky.
#6
Posted 2012-June-12, 00:23
aguahombre, on 2012-June-11, 21:48, said:
You did read the OP and still make this statement?
May I repeat the last sentence for you: "Vvvvvv: I think it was an honest question, this was literally the first time ever they had encountered an Ekrens style assumed fit preempt."
For the real question: I agree with Nigel.
Roland
Sanity Check: Failure (Fluffy)
More system is not the answer...
#7
Posted 2012-June-12, 00:54
#8
Posted 2012-June-12, 03:43
Codo, on 2012-June-12, 00:23, said:
May I repeat the last sentence for you: "Vvvvvv: I think it was an honest question, this was literally the first time ever they had encountered an Ekrens style assumed fit preempt."
For the real question: I agree with Nigel.
That was edited in by me after Auguhombre's post sorry. Habit from another forum. This forum does not mark 'edited by' when you edit though which is a shame.
Vvvv: I forgot! And forget.
This post has been edited by Cthulhu D: 2012-June-12, 04:21
#9
Posted 2012-June-12, 03:59
Cthulhu D, on 2012-June-12, 03:43, said:
It does if you tick "Show 'Edit by' line".
Or you could just put the word "Edit:" in front of it.
This post has been edited by gnasher: 2012-June-12, 04:00
#10
Posted 2012-June-12, 04:32
aguahombre, on 2012-June-11, 21:48, said:
Assuming that declarer had a legitimate need to ask the question, it makes perfect sense that he should wait till now to do so, as it is likely to put you under pressure since you know the layout and don't want to reveal it. That's just good table presence. Admittedly you shouldn't really ask a question that you don't need the answer to.
This is not dissimilar to playing quickly as declarer in order to put defenders under pressure, and so you can get information about the layouts from when they stop to think.
#13
Posted 2012-June-12, 10:37
phil_20686, on 2012-June-12, 04:32, said:
I guess my lack of the good table presence to use this is another reason I am not considered a super-tough opponent. The way I read your post, the "legitimate need" to ask the question at this particular time is precisely to get lefty's reaction.
#14
Posted 2012-July-09, 14:15
aguahombre, on 2012-June-11, 21:48, said:
Definitely agree. There is no legitimate need for this question. Declarer already knows the spade division and that finessing is right, and is mucking about solely on the chance of smoking out the stiff queen. I consider this unethical if not actually illegal. Perhaps an argument could even be made that the remark violates law 74B2 or 74C4. But realistically, he will probably just get away with it.
-gwnn
#15
Posted 2012-July-09, 15:58
I got a chuckle when a top player with renown for his active (maybe overboard) ethics flawlessly answered the original question and the first follow-up by his former partner. Then, when a third inquiry came out, he merely said, "You're fishing." His partner had the focus honor
In the OP case, the fishing is on the first inquiry.
#16
Posted 2012-July-10, 10:19
billw55, on 2012-July-09, 14:15, said:
I don't think so. It's a legitimate question, I'd be hard pressed to call it a "gratuitous comment" (74B2). And what "significant occurrence" is it calling attention to (74C4)? I think the latter is intended for comments like "he showed out of that suit".