blackshoe, on 2012-August-18, 17:50, said:
It seems to me that "South though he was playing some other system" is an assumption with not a lot of evidence to back it up, save for the one bit that he opened 1♣ with insufficient values for Precision. If you want to ask him what system he thought he was playing, the answer might be interesting, but it seems quite likely to me that South had a non-specific (in that he didn't actually think anything in particular) brain fart, and wasn't actually thinking that he was playing some other system. If that's the case, this line of inquiry goes nowhere.
I agree somewhat with your last sentence (I disagree since I think it is a good idea to just ask South why he was opening 1
♣), but completely disagree with your first. There is evidence to back up that South was not playing Precision when he opened 1
♣. The original post starts with:
lamford, on 2012-August-15, 19:21, said:
North-South were inveterate precision players and this was the last board of a close match. South could not explain how he came to open a strong club, but was awake enough to alert North's 1D reply and explain it as 0-7.
If South was fully aware that he was playing Precision, why did he need to be "awake enough" to alert North's 1
♦ reply? If he was fully aware that he was playing Precision, he would alert 1
♦ in his sleep, since he has done it a million times before. (Assume for example that South was aware he played Precision and that he thought that one of the x's was an ace, giving him 16 HCP. Now read the OP again. Why would South need to be particularly awake to alert 1
♦? It is the natural, instinctive reflex of any Precision player to alert 1
♦. If South would have been aware all along that he was playing Precision, the phrase about being awake enough to alert 1
♦ doesn't make any sense.)
I think it is entirely reasonable to interpret the OP as "North's mind wandered, he forgot that they were playing Precision, he opened 1
♣ (because it was the opening bid in whatever system he would otherwise play) and realized his gaffe by the time partner responded 1
♦."
Yes, it is an interpretation, but it is consistent with the OP. IMO, assuming that South was aware that he played Precision is less consistent with the OP.
Rik
I want my opponents to leave my table with a smile on their face and without matchpoints on their score card - in that order.
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