Alerting after a forcing NT
#1
Posted 2013-August-22, 03:30
This is playing in Acol clubland where most people don't play a forcing NT (if that makes any diff).
#2
Posted 2013-August-22, 07:59
The phrase "forcing 1NT" (or anything like it) doesn't appear in the Blue Book. The only mention I can find that seems to be relevant is 4H2(h):
Quote
...
A 1NT response to a 1♥ or 1♠ opening which might show up to 12 HCP.
I couldn't find any mention of opener's rebids after the 1NT bid.
#3
Posted 2013-August-22, 08:14
4 C 1 The following are considered 'natural' for the purposes of alerting and regulation of partnership understandings (see also 3E1):
(a) A bid of a suit which shows that suit (3+ cards) and does not show any other suit ...
But if your opponents are likely to be unfamiliar with this style, why not tell them anyway? You could either ignore the rules and alert the bids, or not alert but tell them at the end of the hand.
#4
Posted 2013-August-22, 08:26
gnasher, on 2013-August-22, 08:14, said:
When I play a forcing NT in England (usually in a Precision-style context) then this is what I tend to do, precisely because the style is unfamiliar to a large number of players over here.
#5
Posted 2013-August-22, 08:42
gnasher, on 2013-August-22, 08:14, said:
4 C 1 The following are considered 'natural' for the purposes of alerting and regulation of partnership understandings (see also 3E1):
(a) A bid of a suit which shows that suit (3+ cards) and does not show any other suit ...
But if your opponents are likely to be unfamiliar with this style, why not tell them anyway? You could either ignore the rules and alert the bids, or not alert but tell them at the end of the hand.
That it is considered natural for alerting purposes does not necessarily mean that it is not alertable. Natural calls with an unexpected meaning are alertable.
A natural bid which may "on occasion" be done on a 3-card suit is not alertable. But is this 2m rebid made on a 3-card suit too frequently to count as "on occasion"?
#6
Posted 2013-August-22, 09:04
I think it would come up reasonably frequently, bidding 2C or 2D with 3. On rare occasion it could be 2 cards - a minimum opening 4-5-2-2 hand could have the sequence 1H - 1NT - 2C, as we don't play a 2 major showing opening bid atm. So I guess in light of the above then it definitely needs alerting.
#7
Posted 2013-August-22, 09:14
#8
Posted 2013-August-22, 09:57
#9
Posted 2013-August-22, 10:53
helene_t, on 2013-August-22, 08:42, said:
Yes, that's true, or in fact the wording is "potentially unexpected". What is "potentially unexpected" varies according to the opponents, so we can probably use this to justify alerting in El Mister's local club but not in a national event.
Quote
You write "on occasion" as though quoting from the rules, but I can't find that anywhere in the EBU alerting regulations. I don't think frequency matters - the test is whether it might be unexpected.
#10
Posted 2013-August-22, 12:07
gnasher, on 2013-August-22, 10:53, said:
OB 5 G 3 h: Players should not alert ..... An ostensibly natural new suit rebid that may on occasion only contain three
cards
Or am I reading an outdated version? I just took the top hit on Google http://www.ebu.co.uk...orange-book.pdf
#11
Posted 2013-August-22, 13:22
barmar, on 2013-August-22, 09:57, said:
The ACBL Alert Procedure indeed specifically adderesses the 4=5=2=2 situation, and then blows it by saying 3-cards in (clubs) is "expected". I don't believe in the auction:
1H-1N(F)
2C...our expectation is nothing other than 2 or more clubs...so, we alert it.
#12
Posted 2013-August-22, 14:47
helene_t, on 2013-August-22, 12:07, said:
cards
Or am I reading an outdated version? I just took the top hit on Google http://www.ebu.co.uk...orange-book.pdf
What did you type into your search engine? Maybe typing "EBU Blue Book" gets "showing results for EBU Orange Book"!
I interpret OB 5G3h as referring to sequences like (uncontested) 1♦-1♠-2♥ and 1♦-1♥-2♦-2♠, in which many players might bid a 3-card suit even if undiscussed.
On the other hand, after a forcing 1NT response, there is a partnership agreement that Opener has to rebid a 3-card minor on a 5332 shape. The opponents might not be aware of this quirk of the system, so it is a "potentially unexpected meaning" and should be alerted in EBU-land.
#13
Posted 2013-August-23, 09:44
aguahombre, on 2013-August-22, 13:22, said:
1H-1N(F)
2C...our expectation is nothing other than 2 or more clubs...so, we alert it.
I believe the idea is that you "expect" 3 clubs if you bid as if partner had them. If responder's shape is 3=1=5=4 with minimum values, I expect he'll normally pass 2♣. Once in a great while this might be a 4-2 fit, but he expects that it will usually be a 7 or 8 card fit, better than the probable 5-1 fit in hearts.
On a similar note, do you alert whenever opener reverses or jump shifts? Sometimes it's necessary to do these into 3-card suits, to get a force going (e.g. the MSC death hands). While I know it's possible, I always treat the bid as natural until some later action cancels this assumption.
#14
Posted 2013-August-23, 10:05
barmar, on 2013-August-23, 09:44, said:
No, we believe and expect as you do in those cases. Allowing for a 2-card suit having been bid "as an offer to play" in that strain (using the wording of the Alert procedure) is different from allowing for a reverse or J.S. on 3 cards to have been manufactured out of necessity, IMO.
#15
Posted 2013-August-23, 10:20
I will *explain* my 2♣ call, when asked (with or without the TD present, depending on when I was asked), as "3+, could be a Flannery 4=5=2=2".
#16
Posted 2013-August-23, 17:46
aguahombre, on 2013-August-23, 10:05, said:
But the logic is the same. When you have a minimum 4=5=2=2 hand, you have to manufacture a rebid out of necessity.
The differences may be which auctions the opponents are likely to want to come into. If you have to manufacture a reverse or jump shift, the opponents probably wouldn't be bidding anyway, so the lie probably doesn't get in their way. But if you manufacture a 2♣ bid when opener and responder are both near minimums, that could easily be a suit the opponents would have competed in. So it would help them to know that it might not be a real suit.
I wonder what the actual chance is that 2♣ is bid on a 2-card suit. Can someone do a simulation of 1♥-1NT(f)-2♣ to see the percentage that are 4=5=2=2? The conditions for opener and responder's hands are pretty straightforward, but you also have to constrain the opponents so they don't interfere.
#17
Posted 2013-August-23, 18:00
barmar, on 2013-August-23, 17:46, said:
The differences may be which auctions the opponents are likely to want to come into. If you have to manufacture a reverse or jump shift, the opponents probably wouldn't be bidding anyway, so the lie probably doesn't get in their way. But if you manufacture a 2♣ bid when opener and responder are both near minimums, that could easily be a suit the opponents would have competed in. So it would help them to know that it might not be a real suit.
Hence, we feel we should alert 2C.
#20
Posted 2013-August-30, 11:09