Forced redouble shenanigans EBU
#1
Posted 2011-September-25, 03:27
It relates to 2 pairs games several months apart with the same 4 (decent experienced) players at the table, the same auction, vulnerability (all) and questions asked.
S opens 1N weak
W doubles for penalties
N passes, alerted
E asks about the redouble, confirms it's 100% forcing and passes
S sees E wants to be sure he's getting another bid and passes
The first time E has a flat 0 count, S chalks up +380, EW could have rescued into 2 of a suit
The second time E has a flat 7 count (and no bridge reason to ask about the redouble) and they take 800 with NS able to play in 2 of a suit more cheaply.
S calls in the TD second time and asks about the ethics of E's question. E counters that NS have a CPU that the redouble isn't really forcing so the description is misleading.
Now what ?
#2
Posted 2011-September-25, 03:54
Cyberyeti, on 2011-September-25, 03:27, said:
It relates to 2 pairs games several months apart with the same 4 (decent experienced) players at the table, the same auction, vulnerability (all) and questions asked.
S opens 1N weak
W doubles for penalties
N passes, alerted
E asks about the redouble, confirms it's 100% forcing and passes
S sees E wants to be sure he's getting another bid and passes
The first time E has a flat 0 count, S chalks up +380, EW could have rescued into 2 of a suit
The second time E has a flat 7 count (and no bridge reason to ask about the redouble) and they take 800 with NS able to play in 2 of a suit more cheaply.
S calls in the TD second time and asks about the ethics of E's question. E counters that NS have a CPU that the redouble isn't really forcing so the description is misleading.
Now what ?
If East asks about all such alerts, then there does not need to be a bridge reason for him to ask. In fact, I do not think there ever needs to be a bridge reason to ask.
As for East's complaint that the description is misleading, I'm more sympathetic that the description is misleading, but it seems to me that one is always allowed to pass a forcing bid.
Never tell the same lie twice. - Elim Garek on the real moral of "The boy who cried wolf"
#3
Posted 2011-September-25, 04:41
For some reason there is a widespread belief in England that you shouldn't ask questions unless you're thinking of acting. It's complete cobblers.
These approaches are all legal:
- Always ask about a given category of bid (eg all alerted bids, or all alerted bids early in the auction, or all alerted bids in competition)
- Ask whenever the auction is one where it's quite likely that one would want to know (as in this case).
- Ask if you need to know now, or you know you're going to need to know the meaning later (as in this case).
- Ask if you need to know now, and also frequently and randomly on other occasions.
#4
Posted 2011-September-25, 04:49
I think East is allowed to ask about whatever he wants. Only West is not allowed to take advantage of the UI such created. South can do as he pleases - but the Laws say "take inferences from opps' actions at your own risk", so no redress for South when he goes for 800.
The CPU thing is not applicable here because, again, only North is not allowed to take advantage of a CPU. Here North didn't get a chance to do so, and so no redress for EW when they go for 380. (Unless, somehow, it could be proven NS always leave in the forcing pass when playing against this particular EW...)
ahydra
#5
Posted 2011-September-25, 05:20
gnasher, on 2011-September-25, 04:41, said:
For some reason there is a widespread belief in England that you shouldn't ask questions unless you're thinking of acting. It's complete cobblers.
<snip>
'Some reason' is most likely because the English Bridge Union used to specifically advise that in what was then the Yellow Book. Yes, I'm going back a long way, since I emigrated almost 15 years ago. Once you set something like that in force, though, it's always difficult to reverse it. The Yellow Book used to advise that you should delay asking questions until the end of the auction or after the face-down lead, as appropriate, unless you had a "demonstrable bridge reason" for asking, and warned that saying you always asked wasn't sufficient to escape from a claim that your question had created unauthorised information for your partner.
#6
Posted 2011-September-25, 05:25
brian_m, on 2011-September-25, 05:20, said:
The advice remains in the Orange Book, the successor to the Yellow Book, although it was been toned down a bit.
"Robin Barker is a mathematician. ... All highly skilled in their respective fields and clearly accomplished bridge players."
#7
Posted 2011-September-25, 05:35
gnasher, on 2011-September-25, 04:41, said:
For some reason there is a widespread belief in England that you shouldn't ask questions unless you're thinking of acting. It's complete cobblers.
These approaches are all legal:
- Always ask about a given category of bid (eg all alerted bids, or all alerted bids early in the auction, or all alerted bids in competition)
- Ask whenever the auction is one where it's quite likely that one would want to know (as in this case).
- Ask if you need to know now, or you know you're going to need to know the meaning later (as in this case).
- Ask if you need to know now, and also frequently and randomly on other occasions.
I'm interested in this, since there is (in England) really only one thing this pass ever means when alerted so IMO points 2 and 3 don't apply. Assume he doesn't adopt the first approach or this question would not be relevant.
#8
Posted 2011-September-25, 15:56
There was an alert. I'm not supposed to ask unless it transmits UI to my pard or a rock solid inference to the opps??
I'm supposed to know what's up when they have previousy departed from the agreement???
For all I know I'm about to get a different explanation and I'm entitled to be curious under the circumstances to protect myself next year.
What is baby oil made of?
#9
Posted 2011-September-25, 16:34
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
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
#10
Posted 2011-September-26, 02:06
ggwhiz, on 2011-September-25, 15:56, said:
There was an alert. I'm not supposed to ask unless it transmits UI to my pard or a rock solid inference to the opps??
I'm supposed to know what's up when they have previousy departed from the agreement???
For all I know I'm about to get a different explanation and I'm entitled to be curious under the circumstances to protect myself next year.
I'm not defending the idea, but the EBU's (original?) advice was that if you weren't contemplating any action other than a pass, you should defer your questions until the end of the auction or after the face-down lead, as appropriate. IMO, you should have the choice of 1) normal alerts (whatever that means in your location), 2) asking your opps not to alert at all, and 3) asking them to automatically explain everything.
#11
Posted 2011-September-26, 03:09
Quote
...
3E4: ...Players sometimes say “I always ask whether I intend to bid or not”. This is not recommended.
3E5: As well as giving unauthorised information to partner, questions about bidding may mislead opponents, in which case they may be entitled to redress. Similarly, declarer’s questions about leads, signals and discards could illegally mislead the defenders. (Law 73F)
#12
Posted 2011-September-26, 03:27
Is there a difference between:
N passes alerted by S
E asks
S says forcing to redouble
E passes
and
N passes alerted by S
E asks
S says forcing to redouble
E says "so it's absolutely 100% forcing"
S says yes
E passes
where E is trying to get S to pass because of the previous incident. In my view there is, the first is fine, but overdoing it with the supplementary when you're looking at the 7 count isn't.
The CPU is also interesting, if partner has plenty of previous for passing the board out when a lot of questions have been asked on his right or removing to his 5 or 6 card suit even though systemically he should always redouble, how much of this are the opponents entitled to know ?
#13
Posted 2011-September-26, 03:56
What seems unfair about the situation is that NS can have an agreement that you need to know about, then take advantage of the opponent's evident interest in asking questions about it; yet the opponents are not allowed to randomise their decision to ask questions in order to conceal any inference that the ops might make from their questions.
#14
Posted 2011-September-26, 04:36
iviehoff, on 2011-September-26, 03:56, said:
It's not a contract signed in blood, but if the passer knows that even though the system agreement is that redouble is mandatory, history suggests that 30% of the time opener does something else, what does he say to the opps, and how big does that percentage have to be before he mentions it ? Also if you've noticed that every time a lot of questions are asked where it seems that the oppo is anxious to have the auction continue, he passes it out, do you have to mention that ?
#15
Posted 2011-September-26, 04:58
Cyberyeti, on 2011-September-26, 04:36, said:
He tells them. That's clearly an implicit agreement.
Quote
If it's often enough for responder to have noticed, it's often enough for him to mention it.
Quote
Yes, again that's clearly an implicit agreement.
#16
Posted 2011-September-26, 05:40
ahydra, on 2011-September-25, 04:49, said:
If North-South's real agreement is "pass forces a redouble but if you sniff (from AI of course) that we might be making, you can pass if you want" then this is a CPU which should be disclosed to East-West so it is relevant.
However, if through experience playing against this North-South pair East knows that quizing the forcing nature of responders pass will likely result in 1NTx being passed by opener and East then proceeds to ask about North's pass with no real bridge reason and with an objective to fool South into passing, that's cheating - but virtually impossible to prove.
Two wrongs probably make a right here I think!
I ♦ bidding the suit below the suit I'm actually showing not to be described as a "transfer" for the benefit of people unfamiliar with the concept of a transfer
#17
Posted 2011-September-26, 07:13
Cyberyeti, on 2011-September-25, 03:27, said:
It relates to 2 pairs games several months apart with the same 4 (decent experienced) players at the table, the same auction, vulnerability (all) and questions asked.
S opens 1N weak
W doubles for penalties
N passes, alerted
E asks about the redouble, confirms it's 100% forcing and passes
S sees E wants to be sure he's getting another bid and passes
The first time E has a flat 0 count, S chalks up +380, EW could have rescued into 2 of a suit
The second time E has a flat 7 count (and no bridge reason to ask about the redouble) and they take 800 with NS able to play in 2 of a suit more cheaply.
S calls in the TD second time and asks about the ethics of E's question. E counters that NS have a CPU that the redouble isn't really forcing so the description is misleading.
Now what ?
South alerts the pass, East asks, and South asks about the ethics of East's asking? It is time South grew up. Why shouldn't East ask?
East’s complaint is reasonable, of course. MI, no question, and I would warn South it is time to change his description.
Merseyside England UK
EBL TD
Currently at home
Visiting IBLF from time to time
<webjak666@gmail.com>
#18
Posted 2011-September-26, 08:10
We play this sort of forced redouble mechanism.
I open a lot more slightly unusual weak no trumps than my partner, not flat out psyches but little distortions (xx, Q10xx, xx, AKQ9x which he would open 1♣ for example yesterday in 3rd seat to shut out the spades). This means that I do something other than redouble (I'd bid 2♣ here if 1N-x came back to me) much more often than he does, and I don't think he'd ever pass out 1Nx while I have 2 or 3 times in 15 years.
While our system agreement is the same for both of us, our propensity for bending system agreements is different, meaning that even though we would both pull 1Nx on the same hands, he wouldn't have opened 1N in the first place with many of them, meaning the odds at the table of something other than a redouble are different.
A side effect is that I explain his forcing pass subtly differently to the way he explains mine. I explain his as "forcing usually to a redouble", he explains mine as "forcing to a redouble". I don't think this has been a conscious decision by either of us up to this point, it just comes out like that.
How close does this come to breaking the "both partners must play the same system" requirement.
Also on the odd occasion where I have passed 1Nx out, RHO has asked several questions to absolutely ensure I was going to bid again. And has had nothing each time. I wanted to see what people felt about asking multiple questions with a reasonable hand to try to induce a pass, my view is that one question is very reasonable, several in that circumstance would need a look.
#19
Posted 2011-September-26, 08:25
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
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
#20
Posted 2011-September-26, 08:32
Cyberyeti, on 2011-September-26, 08:10, said:
Supposing I was playing against you and I asked about your methods. I might notice with interest the word “usually” and because of that might ask more to elicit what was going on.
What right would you have to suggest this is "about asking multiple questions with a reasonable hand to try to induce a pass"? If you suggested that I would put in a formal complaint to the EBU L&EC about this unjustified and unjustifiable accusation.
It would never occur to me that you were going to pass a forcing pass and the idea that I would be trying to induce a pass I consider nonsensical and offensive.
People ask questions because they want to know what is going on.
Merseyside England UK
EBL TD
Currently at home
Visiting IBLF from time to time
<webjak666@gmail.com>