Another Strange Auction Involving Flannery
#1
Posted 2009-January-08, 08:15
♠ A
♥ KQJTxxxx
♦ xx
♣ Qx
All Vul. East Deals.
East opened 2♦ which was alerted as "Flannery". Upon hearing his partner's alert, East made a face that only I noticed... What would you do, and is a director call neccesary? (Their card says Flannery). More to come on this soon...
#2
Posted 2009-January-08, 08:25
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Your best hope is to pass and let RHO bid diamonds so he clarifies the things. Or maybe pass 2♥.
#3
Posted 2009-January-08, 08:27
wyman, on 2012-May-04, 09:48, said:
rbforster, on 2012-May-20, 21:04, said:
My YouTube Channel
#4
Posted 2009-January-08, 08:29
#5
Posted 2009-January-08, 17:01
#6
Posted 2009-January-08, 17:22
#7
Posted 2009-January-08, 17:27
barmar, on Jan 8 2009, 06:22 PM, said:
They also played New Suit NF over 2M pre-empts... I don't know if that changes anything.
#8
Posted 2009-January-08, 17:56
mtvesuvius, on Jan 8 2009, 06:27 PM, said:
barmar, on Jan 8 2009, 06:22 PM, said:
They also played New Suit NF over 2M pre-empts... I don't know if that changes anything.
I think it does, since East should probably have at most 1 ♠ to pull it. This seems pretty unlikely, given your shape in the majors.
Is this ACBL territory? If so, did East alert the 2♠ as non-forcing? He's supposed to continue alerting and bidding as if he didn't hear his partner's original alert and explanation.
#9
Posted 2009-January-08, 17:59
barmar, on Jan 8 2009, 06:56 PM, said:
mtvesuvius, on Jan 8 2009, 06:27 PM, said:
barmar, on Jan 8 2009, 06:22 PM, said:
They also played New Suit NF over 2M pre-empts... I don't know if that changes anything.
I think it does, since East should probably have at most 1 ♠ to pull it. This seems pretty unlikely, given your shape in the majors.
Is this ACBL territory? If so, did East alert the 2♠ as non-forcing? He's supposed to continue alerting and bidding as if he didn't hear his partner's original alert and explanation.
East had 2♠, and it was not alerted... (This is ACBL
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#10
Posted 2009-January-09, 06:59
barmar, on Jan 8 2009, 06:56 PM, said:
mtvesuvius, on Jan 8 2009, 06:27 PM, said:
barmar, on Jan 8 2009, 06:22 PM, said:
They also played New Suit NF over 2M pre-empts... I don't know if that changes anything.
I think it does, since East should probably have at most 1 ♠ to pull it. This seems pretty unlikely, given your shape in the majors.
Is this ACBL territory? If so, did East alert the 2♠ as non-forcing? He's supposed to continue alerting and bidding as if he didn't hear his partner's original alert and explanation.
I must respectfully disagree. Although he has to carefulyl avoid taking any advantage from the unautherised information of the alert and explination, he should alert and describe their agreements.
If their agreement is that 2♦ is flannery then he needs to alert or explain 2♠ given that 2♦ is flannery even though he will then need to conitnue bidding as if it is whatever he originally thought it was.
If, for example, 2 dimonds was alerted but not asked for or explained originally (which didn't awake him to his misbid for some reason, lets say he had bid it as a multi or simmilar alertable bid), but asked about later; if 2♦ being flannery woudl have chagned any of teh alerts, lack of alerts or explinations he had already given he must go back and correct them, and teh director should be immidiatly called (as in all MI situations). Of course he still needs to follow the UI laws (73C, 16A) with regards to his bidding.
Odd as this seems in some ways, I'm pretty sure thats according to the laws.
#11
Posted 2009-January-09, 08:11
Lanor Fow, on Jan 9 2009, 07:59 AM, said:
barmar, on Jan 8 2009, 06:56 PM, said:
mtvesuvius, on Jan 8 2009, 06:27 PM, said:
barmar, on Jan 8 2009, 06:22 PM, said:
They also played New Suit NF over 2M pre-empts... I don't know if that changes anything.
I think it does, since East should probably have at most 1 ♠ to pull it. This seems pretty unlikely, given your shape in the majors.
Is this ACBL territory? If so, did East alert the 2♠ as non-forcing? He's supposed to continue alerting and bidding as if he didn't hear his partner's original alert and explanation.
I must respectfully disagree. Although he has to carefulyl avoid taking any advantage from the unautherised information of the alert and explination, he should alert and describe their agreements.
If their agreement is that 2♦ is flannery then he needs to alert or explain 2♠ given that 2♦ is flannery even though he will then need to conitnue bidding as if it is whatever he originally thought it was.
If, for example, 2 dimonds was alerted but not asked for or explained originally (which didn't awake him to his misbid for some reason, lets say he had bid it as a multi or simmilar alertable bid), but asked about later; if 2♦ being flannery woudl have chagned any of teh alerts, lack of alerts or explinations he had already given he must go back and correct them, and teh director should be immidiatly called (as in all MI situations). Of course he still needs to follow the UI laws (73C, 16A) with regards to his bidding.
Odd as this seems in some ways, I'm pretty sure thats according to the laws.
If East intended his bid as weak, then east must treat 2♠ as NF, and not as a flannery response. The alert must be ignored. East should alert 2♠ as NF and pass; especially with 2♠. I beleive this is the UI law here...
#12
Posted 2009-January-09, 09:43
Ignoring the alert is not an option. You cannot make a call which could demonstrably have been suggested over another by the UI you have, unless there is no logical alternative to that call. "I was always going to..." is not good enough. You can't make that determination if you ignore the alert. And if you explain 2♠ as if it were a response to a weak 2♦, or whatever you intended 2♦ to mean, you are giving MI to opponents, and you just can't knowingly do that, so again, you can't ignore partner's alert, as it is that which woke you up.
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
Our ultimate goal on defense is to know by trick two or three everyone's hand at the table. -- Mike777
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
#13
Posted 2009-January-09, 09:54
blackshoe, on Jan 9 2009, 10:43 AM, said:
Ignoring the alert is not an option. You cannot make a call which could demonstrably have been suggested over another by the UI you have, unless there is no logical alternative to that call. "I was always going to..." is not good enough. You can't make that determination if you ignore the alert. And if you explain 2♠ as if it were a response to a weak 2♦, or whatever you intended 2♦ to mean, you are giving MI to opponents, and you just can't knowingly do that, so again, you can't ignore partner's alert, as it is that which woke you up.
Thanks, this makes more sense now.
#14
Posted 2009-January-09, 10:07
mtvesuvius, on Jan 8 2009, 09:15 AM, said:
♠ A
♥ KQJTxxxx
♦ xx
♣ Qx
All Vul. East Deals.
East opened 2♦ which was alerted as "Flannery". Upon hearing his partner's alert, East made a face that only I noticed... What would you do, and is a director call neccesary? (Their card says Flannery). More to come on this soon...
Your situation is analogous to that after a bluff. You must try to tell partner that you want to play 4♥ in spite of their opening bid.
There will most likely be no later score corrections, because this was just a misbid. Calling the director anyway in a friendly matter after the play is a good idea to clarify things.
#15
Posted 2009-January-09, 12:25
#16
Posted 2009-January-09, 12:39
Fluffy, on Jan 9 2009, 01:25 PM, said:
That's what I did, LHO doubled and I made 5
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Thanks everyone for all your thoughts... They are much appreciaited.
#17
Posted 2009-January-09, 12:52
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
Our ultimate goal on defense is to know by trick two or three everyone's hand at the table. -- Mike777
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
#18
Posted 2009-January-09, 13:01
blackshoe, on Jan 9 2009, 10:52 AM, said:
I think you are reading to much into his words. He means figuratively he will be thankful that his RHO has exposed his misbid/psych/whatever, so he can bid the game he always wanted to bid.
#19
Posted 2009-January-09, 13:57
Let me see if I understand the situation correctly. E/W do play flannery. E opened 2D mistakenly (he doesn't have a flannery opening, he forgot they played flannery, and he intended the 2D bid to have some other meaning). West correctly alerted and explained the 2D bid as flannery, in accordance with their agreements. This woke up E to his mistake. (E made a face, but since only S saw it it had no influence on the auction.) This occurs in ACBL-land.
It is my understanding that E is entitled to be "woken up" by a correct alert and/or explanation, and that this does not constitute UI. A correct explanation of the partnership's agreements can remind a player of those agreements and he can act on this knowledge in all further bidding without penalty -- it is not UI. The palyer who misbid must alert and explain his partner's bids as responses to flannery, but does not need to continue to bid his hand as if he doesn't know the meaning of his partner's bids, or as if his own hand is something that it isn't. He may full well consider that he has made an error, and continue the auction taking that information and its likely effects on his partner into account, without penaly. If he can come up with some bids that "expose his misbid," then his partner is entitled to realize that the bid was a misbid and take all of the implications of that into account, all without penalty. (For example, if E simply continues to rebid diamonds, bids that have no place in the flannery system, his partner may correctlly determine that he actually has diamonds and act on this determination.)
The only possible place I see for UI here is if E tipped off his mistake to his partner in an unauthorized way - making a face his partner saw, or failing to alert his partner's bids as if they were responses to flannery. In that case W has UI. Also, alerts and explanations of future bids may be difficult and may have to be handled delicately. But there is not UI passed in a correct and proper explanation of your actual agreements -- it is simply not the case that E has any UI here.
#20
Posted 2009-January-09, 14:38
Lanor Fow, on Jan 9 2009, 07:59 AM, said:
barmar, on Jan 8 2009, 06:56 PM, said:
mtvesuvius, on Jan 8 2009, 06:27 PM, said:
barmar, on Jan 8 2009, 06:22 PM, said:
They also played New Suit NF over 2M pre-empts... I don't know if that changes anything.
I think it does, since East should probably have at most 1 ♠ to pull it. This seems pretty unlikely, given your shape in the majors.
Is this ACBL territory? If so, did East alert the 2♠ as non-forcing? He's supposed to continue alerting and bidding as if he didn't hear his partner's original alert and explanation.
I must respectfully disagree. Although he has to carefulyl avoid taking any advantage from the unautherised information of the alert and explination, he should alert and describe their agreements.
If their agreement is that 2♦ is flannery then he needs to alert or explain 2♠ given that 2♦ is flannery even though he will then need to conitnue bidding as if it is whatever he originally thought it was.
If, for example, 2 dimonds was alerted but not asked for or explained originally (which didn't awake him to his misbid for some reason, lets say he had bid it as a multi or simmilar alertable bid), but asked about later; if 2♦ being flannery woudl have chagned any of teh alerts, lack of alerts or explinations he had already given he must go back and correct them, and teh director should be immidiatly called (as in all MI situations). Of course he still needs to follow the UI laws (73C, 16A) with regards to his bidding.
Odd as this seems in some ways, I'm pretty sure thats according to the laws.
My response assumed that their agreement was that 2♦ was weak, not Flannery, i.e. that the original alert was wrong. The original post didn't say who forgot their agreement. The face that East made could either have been embarassment at having forgotten that they play Flannery, or surprise or dismay that their partner thought they did.
I remember about a decade ago I was playing with a pick-up partner at an NABC, and he explained a bid as a convention I'd never even heard of, much less discussed with him. I was not as experienced at comporting myself properly as I hope I am now, and I blurted out "What!?"