I was reading a thread about psyches, and got to thinking about psyche controls. Suppose you play a system, as I do, in which a 2♣ opening shows 20-21(2) HCP, balanced, or a GF hand. All of partner’s responses except for 2♦ show weak hands, ie. not interested in game opposite 20-21 balanced. So… would a 2♣ psyche, with a diamond bust, be considered a controlled psyche? Playing one-way Drury, is opening 1M with long clubs a controlled psyche?
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Psyche controls
#1
Posted 2021-November-04, 03:21
I know not with what weapons World War III will be fought, but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones -- Albert Einstein
#2
Posted 2021-November-04, 05:53
Vampyr, on 2021-November-04, 03:21, said:
I was reading a thread about psyches, and got to thinking about psyche controls. Suppose you play a system, as I do, in which a 2♣ opening shows 20-21(2) HCP, balanced, or a GF hand. All of partner’s responses except for 2♦ show weak hands, ie. not interested in game opposite 20-21 balanced. So… would a 2♣ psyche, with a diamond bust, be considered a controlled psyche? Playing one-way Drury, is opening 1M with long clubs a controlled psyche?
It's a not uncommon ploy when playing with robots.
Fortuna Fortis Felix
#3
Posted 2021-November-04, 06:55
Vampyr, on 2021-November-04, 03:21, said:
I was reading a thread about psyches, and got to thinking about psyche controls. Suppose you play a system, as I do, in which a 2♣ opening shows 20-21(2) HCP, balanced, or a GF hand. All of partner's responses except for 2♦ show weak hands, ie. not interested in game opposite 20-21 balanced. So… would a 2♣ psyche, with a diamond bust, be considered a controlled psyche? Playing one-way Drury, is opening 1M with long clubs a controlled psyche?
2♣ = ART either
- G/F or
- TRF weak 5-9 HCP with 6♦. Responder bids 2♦ unless interested in proceeding opposite the latter.
This is an agreement not a psych
#4
Posted 2021-November-04, 11:57
ACBL regulations are different - here we do have a "you can't psych an artificial opening bid" rule. (heh, it looks like the 99ers get to do it, but not open players. New note for the committee). In the EBU, however:
I would be asking instead of these forums the L&E committee, but I think the pass is really on the borderline of "you may not X if the earlier bid was a psyche"/"further actions by the psycher". But I'm biased from a "can't psych 2♣ opener" world.
Interestingly enough, due to the definition of Psychic Control, the pass here (and the Watson double example from the White Book) would *not* be a psychic control in the ACBL - they have to be "Bid"s. Benefits of trying to write around "passing a forcing bid is the usual way to show you don't actually have your opener".
Conversely, Drury has *always* been described in England as "the classic psychic control" - and if you do open 1M in third seat with long clubs and pass Drury, it will be ruled that way still (I think). In the ACBL (where NIH does not apply), of course, this is just "expected" (except when I did it. Actually, when I did it, I didn't realize until partner *did* bid 2♣ that that was actually my suit).
White book, 1.4. said:
1.4.1: Systemic psyching of any kind is not permitted. A partnership may not use any agreement to
control a psyche. For example, if you play that a double of 3NT asks partner not to lead the suit
you have bid, you may not make such a double if the earlier suit bid was a psyche.
...
There is not an EBU regulations that a player may not psyche a game-forcing or near gameforcing artificial opening bid.
1.4.2: The actions of the psycher’s partner following a psyche – and, possibly, further actions by the
psycher – may provide evidence of an undisclosed, and therefore illegal, understanding. If so,
then the partnership is said to have ‘fielded’ the psyche.
control a psyche. For example, if you play that a double of 3NT asks partner not to lead the suit
you have bid, you may not make such a double if the earlier suit bid was a psyche.
...
There is not an EBU regulations that a player may not psyche a game-forcing or near gameforcing artificial opening bid.
1.4.2: The actions of the psycher’s partner following a psyche – and, possibly, further actions by the
psycher – may provide evidence of an undisclosed, and therefore illegal, understanding. If so,
then the partnership is said to have ‘fielded’ the psyche.
I would be asking instead of these forums the L&E committee, but I think the pass is really on the borderline of "you may not X if the earlier bid was a psyche"/"further actions by the psycher". But I'm biased from a "can't psych 2♣ opener" world.
Interestingly enough, due to the definition of Psychic Control, the pass here (and the Watson double example from the White Book) would *not* be a psychic control in the ACBL - they have to be "Bid"s. Benefits of trying to write around "passing a forcing bid is the usual way to show you don't actually have your opener".
Conversely, Drury has *always* been described in England as "the classic psychic control" - and if you do open 1M in third seat with long clubs and pass Drury, it will be ruled that way still (I think). In the ACBL (where NIH does not apply), of course, this is just "expected" (except when I did it. Actually, when I did it, I didn't realize until partner *did* bid 2♣ that that was actually my suit).
When I go to sea, don't fear for me, Fear For The Storm -- Birdie and the Swansong (tSCoSI)
#5
Posted 2021-November-05, 09:48
In Italy you can psych an artificial opening bid at teams, although not at pairs. But given the protective element, I suspect your agreement would be classifed as a Brown Sticker and thus only allowed at top level competition.
Opening 1M in third seat with only long clubs and passing Drury looks like a controlled psyche to me, but I somehow doubt that is the official line.
You and others already tackled this in this old discussion.
Opening 1M in third seat with only long clubs and passing Drury looks like a controlled psyche to me, but I somehow doubt that is the official line.
You and others already tackled this in this old discussion.
#6
Posted 2021-November-06, 14:08
It is an area of the bidding code very open to abuse and the only way of really finding out is to keep records over time. Another example: opps are playing a 1NT response structure that does not allow direct raises with a balanced hand. Is that a psychic control? Do you change your mind when the opps open a weak 5♥5♣ with a SNT? How about when they do it 3 times in a month? Note that I think the biggest issue of psychic controls is that they are CPUs - if you have put in place a system to control a certain psyche, it is hardly a surprise to partner when that psyche is made. Therefore it is not a psyche but part of the system. Much of the time, calling such methods psyches is just a means of getting round system regulations by not giving full disclosure. This is clearly something that should not be allowed.
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