Is it a correc t alert?
#1
Posted 2012-October-07, 08:29
Thanks for answer
Gigi
P.s. With 4 card of H i compete in an heart contract with tragical consequences.
#2
Posted 2012-October-07, 08:32
#3
Posted 2012-October-07, 08:45
wank, on 2012-October-07, 08:32, said:
With a 3 suited hand what is the rule.One may choose a bid that show 2 suit casually.
#4
Posted 2012-October-07, 09:19
patroclo, on 2012-October-07, 08:45, said:
He has to tell you what the bid means, not what he has. He can bid 2NT on any hand he wants - that's the rule.
It's basically mostly covered by law 40 (a couple of other laws may sometimes apply as well), which you can find by googling the laws of contract bridge.
If it's any consolation, he will score far more own goals than goals playing like this.
#5
Posted 2012-October-07, 13:59
patroclo, on 2012-October-07, 08:45, said:
A person with a three-suited hand can certainly choose two of them to show. with three suits excluding the one opened, a takeout double seems more sensible, and making a 2-suited bid forcing to the three level with only nine cards is pretty foolhardy; however, if the description given was correct, it does not seem that the player did anything wrong.
#6
Posted 2012-October-07, 14:04
PhilKing, on 2012-October-07, 09:19, said:
That depends. OP does not mention his jurisdiction, but in the ACBL it is not permitted to psyche artificial bids. Perhaps there is such a rule in other places as well.
#8
Posted 2012-October-07, 14:58
Vampyr, on 2012-October-07, 14:04, said:
That is not true. Certain artificial opening bids, yes.
#9
Posted 2012-October-07, 15:09
aguahombre, on 2012-October-07, 14:58, said:
Yes, sorry. I remembered the regulation very poorly:
Quote
responses thereto. Psyching conventional suit responses, which are less than
2NT, to natural openings.
#11
Posted 2012-October-07, 15:45
patroclo, on 2012-October-07, 15:30, said:
That might feel sleezy, but it isn't wrong. With self-alerting (screens or on-line) we still disclose agreements, not what we have in our hands.
#12
Posted 2012-October-07, 15:55
aguahombre, on 2012-October-07, 15:45, said:
I'm not a convention expert but if i bid 2 nt with diamond and spade, Probably there is a bid when i have diamond and heart or heart and spade. With 3 suit what is the way of choice.
#13
Posted 2012-October-07, 16:15
patroclo, on 2012-October-07, 15:55, said:
If your hand is strong enough, a takeout double is usually the choice with 3 suits. I'm guessing that in this case his hand wasn't strong enough, so he chose the more preemptive bid.
#14
Posted 2012-October-07, 16:22
#15
Posted 2012-October-07, 16:25
patroclo, on 2012-October-07, 15:55, said:
If a person has three suits and has a way to show two, he can show whichever two he wants.
#16
Posted 2012-October-07, 16:27
aguahombre, on 2012-October-07, 15:45, said:
Why is it sleazy? Perhaps he promises ten cards, but he has nine and chose to make a two-suited bid. Maybe he even promises only nine.
#17
Posted 2012-October-07, 16:37
#18
Posted 2012-October-07, 16:37
#19
Posted 2012-October-07, 16:52
Vampyr, on 2012-October-07, 16:27, said:
Perhaps a more careful reading of my post would discover that I didn't call it sleezy. I said it might feel sleezy to the poster who brought up the self-alert issue, but that it (disclosing actual agreements) was not wrong.
You and Barmar are actually agreeing with what I wrote.