Acceptance of Transfer
#1
Posted 2011-November-09, 00:47
#2
Posted 2011-November-09, 01:23
Chris3875, on 2011-November-09, 00:47, said:
The acceptance of the transfer is only alertable if it says something about strength or shape. Most commonly, if you play super-accepts and the acceptance of the transfer denies a super-accept you need to alert it. Reference: ABF Alerting Regs 4.2.
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
#3
Posted 2011-November-09, 01:40
#4
Posted 2011-November-09, 03:17
No alert is required in ACBL, even if you have superaccept options. ACBL generally doesn't require you to alert bids that have extra meaning due to negative inferences from not choosing some other bid.
#6
Posted 2011-November-09, 03:20
It is a little weird as it isn't fully consistent with other situations like kokish relay and/or keri and/or capp.
In koskish relay a heart bid after a strong forcing auction typically shows either hearts or a very strong balanced hand and forces a spade response (some pairs have agreed breaks, but many do not, and the breaks are as rare as super-accepts in a transfer). I alert the spade bid, and most other players do, and I think that is right. So auctions are either 1♣! (strong) - 1♦! (weak) - 1♥! (kokish, ♥ or v.strong balanced) - 1♠! (forced) OR 2♣ (strong artificial, not alerted in ACBL) - 2♦! (many possible agreements, alertable if game forcing) - 2♥! (Kokish) - 2♠! (forced).
In keri a bid of 2♣ over partner's 1nt is basically 98+% forcing of 2♦ (the only non-2♦ response is a super-accept of 3♦ when you have a super max with long 1-suited diamonds, very similar to a transfer), but I've always alerted and felt you need to alert the forced 2♦ response.
In capp a bid of 2♣ (alertable) over the opponents 1nt bid shows a single unspecified long suit and some people play it forces partner to bid 2♦ (if opponents pass 2♣) so the 2♣ bidder can reveal their suit (passing if it is diamonds). Really responder should be able to show their own long suit, especially a major by bidding 2M, but many pairs don't play with this agreement, and even when you do it is a pretty rare occurrence, so the 2♦ is similarly near forced by the 2♣.
So all of these auctions tend to get alerts (although people in my experience are inconsistent with the capp 2♦ alert) even though they are very like the transfer situation. One thing that might guide it in some places is if the bid shows a willingness to play the contract specified. This isn't true in the Kokish case, but is true in the transfers, keri, and capp cases. In the ACBL a difference that may make the transfer case make more sense now is that transfers are generally announced, so the opponents "know" what is going on. Where in the other auctions the preceding call are alerted and opponents may decide not to ask about the alerted bid, and then be surprised if the forced follow on is not alerted and wasn't natural.
#7
Posted 2011-November-09, 03:36
#8
Posted 2011-November-09, 04:04
barmar, on 2011-November-09, 03:36, said:
In Keri and capp it is "natural" in that it is an offer to play there, all be it one that is only taken up around 30% of the time or so. But yeah, I agree it isn't exactly the same.
#9
Posted 2011-November-09, 04:24
#10
Posted 2011-November-09, 09:07
Quote
The transfer bid is alertable. Acceptance of the transfer, whether or not after interference, is alertable if it conveys any meaning relating to hand strength or length in partner’s shown suit.
So if you play accepts [why "super-accepts"?] then the completion is alertable, if you do not it is not.
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#11
Posted 2011-November-09, 16:15
bluejak, on 2011-November-09, 09:07, said:
So if you play accepts [why "super-accepts"?] then the completion is alertable, if you do not it is not.
If the 1NT opener always accepts the transfer regardless of shape and/or strength, completion of the transfer is not alertable in Australia (the jurisdiction stated in the OP). Completion of a transfer is only alertable in Australia where there is a negative inference available from the fact that the 1NT opener has not super-accepted or if the partnership agreement is such that accepting the transfer promises certain length in the transferor's suit (e.g. some people who use 2♠ as a transfer to ♣ will bid 2NT without ♣ support and 3♣ with ♣ support - both of which would be alertable in Australia).
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
#12
Posted 2011-November-09, 19:38
As for "the jurisdiction stated in the OP" I think it is fairly clear I knew that by quoting the ABF regulations rather than the ACBL, EBU, WBU or anyone else's.
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#13
Posted 2011-November-09, 19:53
bluejak, on 2011-November-09, 19:38, said:
I was responding to your query, why "super-accepts"? and correcting your erroneous statement in which you opined that, "... if you play accepts ... then the completion is alertable, if you do not it is not". In the ABF you only alert acceptance of a transfer if you have an agreement to play super-accepts.
bluejak, on 2011-November-09, 19:38, said:
That was just providing some clarity for earlier poster who had expressed some confusion as to the jurisdiction.
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
#14
Posted 2011-November-10, 16:16
But jargon and idiom aren't always logical. We have things like "Two-way New Minor Forcing", but in most cases one of the minors isn't actually new (which is why some call it "Two-way Checkback").
#15
Posted 2011-November-10, 19:00
mrdct, on 2011-November-09, 19:53, said:
Which is exactly what I said!
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#16
Posted 2011-November-10, 21:39
bluejak, on 2011-November-10, 19:00, said:
As barmar has alluded to, in my part of world there is a radical difference between "accept" which says nothing extra about your hand and "super-accept" which explicitly promises primary support and in some cases other extra information as to strength and/or shape. Hence my disgreement with your suggestion that if you play "accepts" an alert is required.
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-November-11, 02:55
mrdct, on 2011-November-10, 21:39, said:
Whether bidding 2H over a 2D transfer is 'accepting' the transfer or whether breaking is 'accepting' is terminology that seems to vary. I've taken to referring to 'breaking the transfer' as an unambiguous term.
For clarity, it seems that if after your partner bids 2D to transfer to hearts, if you would always bid 2H, then it's not alertable. If certain hands would make some other bid (say, when you have 4 card support), then 2H is alertable as it denies one of those hands.
Incidentally, the same is true in the EBU, although I think you have to break on _all_ 4 card support hands, rather than just maximums, for it to make 2H alertable.
#18
Posted 2011-November-11, 04:41
mjj29, on 2011-November-11, 02:55, said:
If it is then literally nobody has ever alerted one of these in my experience, so it is something that needs more publicity. We break on everything except minimum 4333s with 4 card support, does that require an alert ?
#19
Posted 2011-November-11, 06:08
mjj29, on 2011-November-11, 02:55, said:
Incidentally, the same is true in the EBU, although I think you have to break on _all_ 4 card support hands, rather than just maximums, for it to make 2H alertable.
OB5B2f said:
some other bid) [is alertable], since this shows something specific.
Cyberyeti, on 2011-November-11, 04:41, said:
Maybe nobody plays it. This is not a terribly popular treatment in England.
Quote
We break on everything except minimum 4333s with 4 card support, does that require an alert ?
I would translate "essentially denies" as "denies" and would alert.
#20
Posted 2011-November-13, 23:54
And if the only super-accept you play is a jump in the suit being transferred to, no one alerts that, either -- it's considered "just bridge". The only time people alert their super-accepts is when they use an artificial bid for it (e.g. bidding the next step up) or they have multiple ways to super-accept (e.g. bidding a suit with a doubleton).