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Doubles in ACBL land When to alert them

#1 User is offline   qwery_hi 

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Posted 2009-January-15, 14:07

Playing at the club yesterday, I was told by an experienced opponent that all doubles which are not penalty should be alerted in the ACBL. Is this correct? If it is correct, I find that my club doesn;t enforce it at all. Should it be enforced, and if I had the director called on me, what would the director look for the auction -

1 - p - 1 - p
2 - p - p - X (not alerted)
p - 3 - ap

3 went off 1 while 3 was a make at mps.

Thanks.
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#2 User is offline   awm 

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Posted 2009-January-15, 14:10

That is not the rule.

The ACBL regulation is that doubles with a "highly unusual or unexpected" meaning are alertable. This leaves a great deal up to the director's judgement, but certainly takeout doubles of the opponents opening bids and standard negative doubles in simple auctions like opening-overcall-X are not alertable.

On the auction in question, it is not clear to me what the damage is. Supposing that the double had been alerted as takeout, what would the opponents do differently? They can't bid 3 over 3, and they can't force advancer to pass the double when it wasn't penalty.

And in any case I don't think playing this double as takeout is highly unusual or unexpected.
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#3 User is offline   Phil 

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Posted 2009-January-15, 14:13

The "unusual or unexpected" meaning will be extended to cuebids soon (I hope).

Adam is right; a double here would be expected to be takeout, so it's not alertable.
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#4 User is offline   hrothgar 

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Posted 2009-January-15, 14:18

qwery_hi, on Jan 15 2009, 11:07 PM, said:

Playing at the club yesterday, I was told by an experienced opponent that all doubles which are not penalty should be alerted in the ACBL. Is this correct?

This is most assuredly NOT correct.

AWM has already cited the appropriate guding clause.

If you're opponent ever raises this point again, ask him whether a takeout double in the following position requires an alert

1 - (X)
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#5 User is offline   Mbodell 

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Posted 2009-January-15, 14:47

I've had one person explain the ACBL alert requirements of doubles as if your double is primarily penalty oriented it doesn't need an alert. If your double is primarily take out oriented it doesn't need an alert.

About the only X I alert are doubles that are part of a relay that opponents have interfered (I.e., X is a step of the relay showing something specific like 6322 shape), or a X saying don't lead my suit like after 1 - 2 - P - 2 - X* (don't lead my suit).
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#6 User is offline   kenberg 

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Posted 2009-January-15, 15:00

People say all sorts of things.

This particular double would have been treated as take-out by Charles Goren and by my grandmother. If it is anything other than a take-out double then that should be alerted. Also if your partner had doubled directly over 2H I think almost everyone (including Goren and Grandma) would take this as take-out, the reason being that partner has spades, presumably four, but short hearts so that a first round double was not appropriate.

There certainly are doubles where some might play them as take-out, others as penalty. There can be disagreement about what actually is standard. For example:

1D Pass 1NT pass
Pass X



Some would play this as take-out but others would play it as a good hand with diamonds locked up and penalty oriented. The logic is that second hand has good values but no convenient way into the auction on the first round since his suit is in fact diamonds. If, as is often the case, you have not discussed this with partner then still no alert is needed. If you have discussed it, then it is still not clear to me an alert is needed whichever meaning you play. My guess is that this is most often played as take-out (penalty is my preference) so maybe the penalty meaning should be alerted, but my view is that an "experienced player" should be well aware of the ambiguity here and can ask if he wishes to know if you indeed have an agreement. Alerting here might give the appearance of trying to help partner rather than opponents. Playing online I would self-alert the intent.

Anyway, don't believe everything you hear from experienced players.
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#7 User is offline   Jacki 

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Posted 2009-January-15, 15:09

Calls on whether or not a double is alertable give TDs a headache when interpreting if it's 'highly unusual or unexpected.' But here's an interesting discussion from an appeals case - from 2006, but it's still interesting.

http://web2.acbl.org/casebooks/Honolulu200...BC+%20063-4.pdf

Jacki
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#8 User is offline   jtfanclub 

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Posted 2009-January-15, 15:34

In general, I alert if...

-A bid shows or denies a suit (or keycard) other than 'the unbid major(s)' or 'the unbid suit(s)'.
This includes 'stolen bid' doubles, support doubles, etc.
-The X is the first call in the auction for our side, below 2NT, and truly penalty.

I don't alert points/'do something intelligent'/action or whatever you want to call them doubles. If partner can leave in with a reasonable hand or take it out with an unreasonable hand, I'm not going to alert it.

So if

1 (P) P (2)
X

shows hearts, I would alert it. If it just showed a good hand, I would not alert it. If it was takeout, I wouldn't alert it either.

This still leaves auctions like:

(1) X (2) X

up in the air. I wouldn't alert it if it showed a good hand and invited partner to pass, and I wouldn't alert it if it was takeout for hearts and clubs either. I would alert it if it promised diamonds though, especially if its meaning is "I suspect the opp is psyching, we probably belong in diamonds".

Go figure.
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#9 User is offline   jdonn 

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Posted 2009-January-15, 15:41

jtfanclub, on Jan 15 2009, 04:34 PM, said:

This still leaves auctions like:

(1) X (2) X

up in the air. I wouldn't alert it if it showed a good hand and invited partner to pass, and I wouldn't alert it if it was takeout for hearts and clubs either. I would alert it if it promised diamonds though, especially if its meaning is "I suspect the opp is psyching, we probably belong in diamonds".

Go figure.

Odd that the only meaning you alert is the standard meaning.
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#10 User is offline   JoAnneM 

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Posted 2009-January-15, 16:19

I call them "kitchen table directors", and they are a "pain-in-the-butt" for actual directors. Rules that you hear at the table are more often wrong than right, especially at my club.
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#11 User is offline   keylime 

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Posted 2009-January-15, 17:39

Agree with JoAnne 1000%.
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#12 User is offline   awm 

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Posted 2009-January-15, 17:40

After reading the authors of the appeals casebook heap complaints upon the ACBL policy about which doubles are alertable... I wonder who exactly makes the alert rules? Evidently not the same set of folks (all good players quite conversant with the laws) who comment in the appeals casebooks...
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#13 User is offline   qwery_hi 

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Posted 2009-January-15, 18:23

Jacki, on Jan 15 2009, 04:09 PM, said:

Calls on whether or not a double is alertable give TDs a headache when interpreting if it's 'highly unusual or unexpected.' But here's an interesting discussion from an appeals case - from 2006, but it's still interesting.

http://web2.acbl.org/casebooks/Honolulu200...BC+%20063-4.pdf

Jacki

Did the ACBL make a definite statement about whether this is alertable?

If not, do the players need to ask if the dbl here denies 4 spades if they want to know (irrespective of their spade length)?
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#14 User is offline   jillybean 

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Posted 2009-January-15, 20:21

keylime, on Jan 15 2009, 04:39 PM, said:

Agree with JoAnne 1000%.

Me too.
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#15 User is offline   kenberg 

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Posted 2009-January-15, 20:28

In the quoted article we find that the EW pair thought that in fact they should alert the double, they were told not to do so by a director, after this hearnig they decided that they would go back to alerting the double even though the committee supported the non-alert.

I see this as a trend. Players who grasp and respect the concept of disclosing agreements find that the promulgated rules are so off kilter that they just decide to ignore the words of the officials and do what clearly is proper in the spirit of disclosure. The folks who are writing and interpreting rules might take note of this.

The logic seems quite straightforward to me. Do we really want fourth hand asking for an explanation every time the auction begins 1m-1H-X? If we do not want this, then when X denies four spades instead of shows four spades, there must be an alert. Wolff appears to be dumbfounded to find that anyone thinks otherwise and while no one mistakes me for Bobby Wolff, so am I.
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#16 User is offline   jtfanclub 

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Posted 2009-January-16, 09:40

jdonn, on Jan 15 2009, 04:41 PM, said:

jtfanclub, on Jan 15 2009, 04:34 PM, said:

This still leaves auctions like:

(1)  X  (2)  X

up in the air.  I wouldn't alert it if it showed a good hand and invited partner to pass, and I wouldn't alert it if it was takeout for hearts and clubs either.  I would alert it if it promised diamonds though, especially if its meaning is "I suspect the opp is psyching, we probably belong in diamonds". 

Go figure.

Odd that the only meaning you alert is the standard meaning.

I know, isn't it strange? Well, at my level the X here just tends to show a decent balanced hand rather than diamonds, but I am aware that at higher levels the meaning I alert becomes standard. Last I heard, people were still alerting stolen bid X's across partner's NT opener, even though most people play that as well. Is that not your experience.

Online I can alert everything, and at the club I can alert based on the club, but who's to say at an NABC for an intermediate event what the opponents expect?

I don't think any of the three meanings (takeout of diamonds, good balanced, showing diamonds) is "highly unusual or unexpected". Would you disagree with this assessment?
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#17 User is offline   Sadie3 

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Posted 2009-January-16, 21:19

According to one of the free lectures I attended in Monterey recently, doubles are one of the hot issues for clearing up in ACBL land. The other 2 tidbits I was advised regarding were the new required tapping of the alert card whenever alerting and requiring the use of a pass card rather than knocking or saying "pass" when ending an auction sequence.
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#18 User is offline   blackshoe 

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Posted 2009-January-16, 23:57

Interesting. As far as I know, none of those things is "new" - although enforcing them apparently is.
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#19 User is offline   Trinidad 

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Posted 2009-January-17, 04:31

They maybe new to Sadie3. Isn't that what these free lectures are for?

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#20 User is offline   blackshoe 

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Posted 2009-January-17, 07:59

Sure. My point was that folks violate those rules all the time, and nobody (including those of us who know better) ever says anything.
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