Alerting responses to 1M EBU
#1
Posted 2011-April-20, 15:28
1M:1NT is 5-12 NF, opener passes with an 11-13 5M332 [and would have opened 1N with 14-16 5M332].
1M:2X is natural; either 9-10 with 2M, invitational with 6+X or a game-force
1M:2M shows a good 7-10 if balanced, weaker balanced hands with three-card support usually respond 1NT. We haven't agreed whether we would pass, respond 1N or respond 2M on a 5431 four-count with three-card support.
Are 1M:1N and 1M:2M alertable? What about 1S:2D - should we alert this response? Or, perhaps, alert responder's rebid on auctions like 1S:2D, 2S:P promising two spades, and 1S:2D, 2S:2N natural GF?
While I am here, am I right in thinking that the only unalertable meaning of 1H-X-2S is a strong-jump shift?
Thanks
#2
Posted 2011-April-20, 17:28
MickyB, on 2011-April-20, 15:28, said:
1M:1NT is 5-12 NF, opener passes with an 11-13 5M332 [and would have opened 1N with 14-16 5M332].
1M:2X is natural; either 9-10 with 2M, invitational with 6+X or a game-force
1M:2M shows a good 7-10 if balanced, weaker balanced hands with three-card support usually respond 1NT. We haven't agreed whether we would pass, respond 1N or respond 2M on a 5431 four-count with three-card support.
Are 1M:1N and 1M:2M alertable?
Thanks
Yes, in my view. Both have suffciently potentially unexpected meanings.
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You certainly need to alert one or the other.
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Any natural and forcing meaning is not alertable.
#3
Posted 2011-April-21, 04:34
#4
Posted 2011-April-21, 07:28
#5
Posted 2011-April-21, 08:02
helene_t, on 2011-April-21, 04:34, said:
The alerting rules in each jurisdiction are based on what the authorities think are best for the players in that jurisdiction [and they will be told they are wrong by some of those players]. In England, a game-forcing 2 over 1 is alertable.
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#6
Posted 2011-April-21, 14:10
paulg, on 2011-April-21, 07:28, said:
This raises the question of whether players should alert a call in a particular sequence against opponent A but not against opponent B, on the basis that the meaning may be "unexpected" to opponent A but not to opponent B. Whilst I think the answer ought to be yes in some situations, I believe that the official EBU answer is no.
In the Spring Foursomes, I'm sure that there will be plenty of pairs playing 1M-P-2M as constructive and plenty playing two-over-ones as game forcing.
However, I'd be surprised to find anyone else playing Mike's hybrid two-over-one responses.
#8
Posted 2011-April-21, 17:12
paulg, on 2011-April-21, 07:28, said:
It is, I suppose, possible that the Spring Foursomes will not become a strong event until the beginning of next month. But if you can respond 1NT to 1♠ (5+ cards) with all of:
♠Qxx ♥x ♦Kxxxxx ♣xxx
♠x ♥AQxx ♦KJxxx ♣Qxx
♠xx ♥Axxx ♦Jxxx ♣xxx
then I would say you need to alert it, rather than assume that your opponents play the same way you do.
And sealed the Law by vote,
It little matters what they thought -
We hang for what they wrote.
#9
Posted 2011-April-22, 02:03
dburn, on 2011-April-21, 17:12, said:
True for some of course, but for half the field it probably starts off as a strong event.
dburn, on 2011-April-21, 17:12, said:
♠Qxx ♥x ♦Kxxxxx ♣xxx
♠x ♥AQxx ♦KJxxx ♣Qxx
♠xx ♥Axxx ♦Jxxx ♣xxx
then I would say you need to alert it, rather than assume that your opponents play the same way you do.
Okay.
#10
Posted 2011-April-22, 12:54
bluejak, on 2011-April-21, 08:02, said:
It's also simpler to make a FG 2/1 alertable. One could argue that it shouldn't be, because it's forcing, like an Acol 2/1 so why does it matter. But it makes the auction simpler. After 1S P 2C (f/g, not alerted) P I would then have to alert a 2S or 3C rebid (because it is unexpectedly forcing) and then responder's 2NT or 3S bid next round, because they are unexpectedly forcing.... it's much easier just to alert the 2/1 in the first place.
#11
Posted 2011-April-23, 05:23