Have your cake and eat it? Disclosure
#21
Posted 2014-November-12, 10:38
So misinformed? No. There is potential for UI down the road but no damage yet.
What is baby oil made of?
#22
Posted 2014-November-12, 10:43
#23
Posted 2014-November-12, 10:53
#24
Posted 2014-November-12, 11:16
Bbradley62, on 2014-November-12, 10:53, said:
No, they were a first-time partnership and I do not think that RHO had ever played a sandwich 1NT as showing the two unbid suits; in fact he seemed not to have heard of the treatment. So the information I was given was simply made up and false.
#25
Posted 2014-November-12, 11:34
Vampyr, on 2014-November-11, 20:22, said:
- If they're reasonably sure, some state their surmise as unqualified fact. They open themselves to misinformation rulings
- Unless they're pretty sure, most just claim "no agreement" and won't be budged. As far as current Bridge law is concerned, that's the safest position.
- A few like me, say they're unsure, but offer to speculate. And now we're in vampyr territory
#26
Posted 2014-November-12, 11:35
Vampyr, on 2014-November-12, 11:16, said:
And did LHO know that? Presumably not. So what was false about his explanation?
#27
Posted 2014-November-12, 11:59
WellSpyder, on 2014-November-12, 11:35, said:
What was false was, we, the information he gave me. I believe, as Nigel above, that if I am given a meaning of a bid, however uncertainly, I should be able to rely on it and be protected if I have been given MI. I also think that Nigel is right that the player should have to guess; if told "no agreement" the opponents may find it impossible to proceed, and must themselves guess, and will receive no protection if they guessed wrong. Does anyone think that this is satisfactory?
#28
Posted 2014-November-12, 12:01
barmar, on 2014-November-12, 09:55, said:
There are three possibilities:
1: The player being unable to give a complete and correct explanation because he has forgotten the agreement - he is (of course) at fault
2: There is indeed no partnership understanding (explicit or implicit) - the player making such a call is at fault!
A good player will never place his partner in a position where the partner cannot be expected to have any idea on what is going on. If he does he is the one causing his partner to misinform opponents.
In either case, opponents have been misinformed, and if they are consequently damaged then they should receive redress.
3: Partner does indeed have the idea which then, being an implicit partnership understanding, is what he is supposed to tell opponents.
If partner now gives the correct explanation then no damage is done.
However, if he turns out to give an incorrect explanation then we have an unfortunate example of alternative 2 above!
#29
Posted 2014-November-12, 12:15
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#30
Posted 2014-November-12, 12:18
#31
Posted 2014-November-12, 12:28
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#32
Posted 2014-November-12, 12:35
pran, on 2014-November-12, 12:01, said:
A good player will never place his partner in a position where the partner cannot be expected to have any idea on what is going on. If he does he is the one causing his partner to misinform opponents.
This is nonsense. If your opponents use a convention you have never heard of and therefore have no defence to, and pass is not sensible, how can you possible conform to this? If you volunteer to "host" as some clubs do, and find yourself playing with a complete stranger, who has maybe braved a bridge club for the first time and has never played duplicate before, how can you possibly conform to this?
I play at low-grade non-EBU clubs. If I were to ask opponents about their agreements and call the TD when I got a muddled answer because they were clueless, that would probably work well for me against 80%+ of opponents - and I would consider myself a cheat. Play at an EBU club and even then you're probably up somewhere around 50% of opponents, at leat for non-routine sequences.
Once again, the elite who discuss every nuance of every sequence after the game are trying to dictate impossible regulations to the rest of the bridge world. Do they not realise that if a normal pair gets in a muddle, they just forget it, throw their scorecard away, go home at the end of the evening, and not even think about bridge until the next session?
If you want to do this as regulation (not law) for tournament bridge, then that's fine by me - but even at that level you still can't expect a pair to have every situation discussed. But it's impossible at club level, and the elite shouldn't think that it is.
#33
Posted 2014-November-12, 13:03
I have a regular once a month partner whose attitude is "I want to play cards and have fun". She's far more interested in the social aspects of club bridge than in the bridge aspects. We play a simple card, and even then we have our mixups. We don't hold post-mortems, she doesn't care. If the club tried to hold her to the standard Sven proposes, she'd either ignore that altogether, or quit playing at this club. She's just one example. This is the largest club (30 tables usually, sometimes 40) in the area. It would die under Sven's standard.
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#34
Posted 2014-November-12, 15:10
Get the facts. No matter what people say, get the facts from both sides BEFORE you make a ruling or leave the table.
Remember - just because a TD is called for one possible infraction, it does not mean that there are no others.
In a judgement case - always refer to other TDs and discuss the situation until they agree your decision is correct.
The hardest rulings are inevitably as a result of failure of being called at the correct time. ALWAYS penalize both sides if this happens.
#35
Posted 2014-November-13, 05:30
#36
Posted 2014-November-13, 05:43
lamford, on 2014-November-12, 05:23, said:
Yes but there isn't much to do about it if your true agreement is "undiscussed".
You can relieve opps a little bid from that burden by avoiding explanations like "I am not sure but I think that ....". Just say that it is a fert if that is what you think it is and if it turns out that partner does not have a fert and the correct explanation was "no agreement" then at least it is clear that there is MI.
This approach has the added advantage that you don't give p the UI that you are unsure. If playing behind screens you don't have that issue but OTOH you don't want too many situations in which different explanation is given on the two sides of the screen.
#37
Posted 2014-November-13, 09:56
Obviously, much less "almost always" with pickups, but even then, "he's from my area, and standard around here is..." or "is either...", provided the opponents aren't also from "my area", is not GBK.
#38
Posted 2014-November-13, 10:00
helene_t, on 2014-November-13, 05:43, said:
You can relieve opps a little bid from that burden by avoiding explanations like "I am not sure but I think that ....". Just say that it is a fert if that is what you think it is and if it turns out that partner does not have a fert and the correct explanation was "no agreement" then at least it is clear that there is MI.
This approach has the added advantage that you don't give p the UI that you are unsure. If playing behind screens you don't have that issue but OTOH you don't want too many situations in which different explanation is given on the two sides of the screen.
How does "no agreement, but there are the following possibilities " fit in? IOW, you're not uncertain you know it could be one of two or three possibilities, say, but you don't know which one because you haven't made an agreement with this partner on the call.
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#39
Posted 2014-November-13, 10:17
helene_t, on 2014-November-13, 05:30, said:
I know that exists when Lebensohl is used after a double of a weak 2. Does it really exist when it's used after an overcall over 1NT, which I suspect is the case in that example?
#40
Posted 2014-November-13, 10:23
barmar, on 2014-November-13, 10:17, said:
Oops yes of course, I don't know why I only thought of the response to dbl.