trevahound, on 2013-December-30, 13:10, said:
I have had many long arguments about this, and come to the provisional conclusion that this is a seriously minority opinion, albeit one I share. I am told repeatedly both by strong players and good directors that it is perfectly proper in every way to ask questions about alerts when you have no bridge reason for doing so, and when you suspect that you might cement UI for your opps via your questions. I find this practice shameful, but that the laws don't care much what I think about this practice, unsurprisingly. I had to give a very distasteful ruling this year against a fairly inexperienced pair where the UI only came about because a very experienced pair asked questions they had no bridge reason to ask during the auction.
Brian Zaugg
The potential problem with your approach is that by not asking about the alert you are providing UI - that you have no bridge reason for asking about the alert.
This was pointed out to me a number of years ago. I was playing in an event in which Multi was allowed, but in order to play Multi (or any other MidChart convention) the partnership had to provide written defenses. My RHO opened 2
♦, and I did not contemplate any action but pass, regardless of the meanings of the many choices provided to me in the written defenses. So I did not consult the written defenses, and I passed. After the hand was over, one of my opponents informed me that by not even glancing at the written defenses, I was conveying information to my partner that I had no reason to do so.
As I said, this is a potential problem, not a clear problem. There are many reasons for not asking opponents the meaning of an alerted call other than what is contained in the asker's hand. The most obvious reason is to prevent the explanation from giving information to the alerter's partner.
East intended 3D as natural, North alerted it. No questions asked.
4NT was RKC and East has lied.
West thought 3D was some sort of Bergen ("8-11")
North-South want West to bid 7H opposite 2 aces.
7D makes 13, 6H makes 12 on any lead.