bluejak, on 2011-July-21, 14:35, said:
The example is one of the examples given at the time by the afore-mentioned member of the L&EC. It is not "my" example.
Actually, I don't agree it is a bad example at all. Consider your action as TD if you had been called at such a time and it had happened - and don't say it would not happen, everything seems to happen eventually. How do you rule?
"Is that weak?"
"Yes."
End of hand: partner says [after you have misdefended] "That was Lucas: didn't you realise?"
"Director!"
How do you rule?
If I judged, after asking appropriate questions, that responder's intention was to leave his opponents unaware that 2
♠ promised a second suit, I would like to be able to rule that he'd intentionally misled his opponents.
I think that such an answer nearly always does have that intention. It's hard to believe that responder thought he was being asked "I already know, or don't care, what shape it shows, but I'd like to know how strong it is." It's almost certain that the intended question was actually "Is that a weak two bid?", and it's almost certain that responder knew that.
The point is that people commonly use the single word "Weak" to mean "A weak two-bid".
A better example would be something like 1
♠ (2
♥) 3
♥ - "Does that show spade support" - "Yes" - when in fact it shows 4-7 and spade support. I think this is a reasonable response, because the term "support" isn't commonly used to mean "support with invitational values". It wouldn't be acceptable to reply "Yes" if 3
♥ actually showed support with a singleton heart, because you know that your answer will leave them unaware of the singleton heart.
This post has been edited by gnasher: 2011-July-21, 15:14