Rob F, on Dec 15 2008, 03:19 AM, said:
JanM, on Dec 15 2008, 02:25 AM, said:
I'm bad at reading tone online, but did you intend "ridiculous" and "diabolical" like you think they ought to be illegal, or like you think they're bad methods for those who play them (or both)?
I meant that these are bad methods that you were only proposing in order to show that it is possible to "get around" the GCC if you want to.
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or maybe
(1♣ 16+) - 1♠(0-8 any shape) - (?) (See bridge bulletin 12/08 pg 15, the Poles in Bejiing played this vs Meckwell)
Any defense is allowed to a conventional club (including a "diabolical" 2♥ multi overcall or the 1♠ "fert"), but maybe you think precision players just get what they deserve when people interfere over their strong club on crap, especially crap with very poor disclosure about tendencies and alternatives? Perhaps we should ban conventional interference there because it's routinely abused and used by players with very bad (almost unethical) disclosure much of the time. I mean I don't want to impugn the Polish team (since their actual disclosure maybe have been better than related in the Bulletin), but do they really never overcall a strong club with any other call besides 1♠ when holding 0-8 points? As an often strong clubber myself, I'd selfishly benefit from having all such crazy defenses to my strong club banned - it'd be less for me to prepare for, but is it's still the wrong approach and I admit it.
I think the problem with those bids (which are also allowed against my basically natural 1♣ that might have only 2 clubs because 1♦ promises 4 and a shaped hand) is exactly what you've pointed out - they are rarely adequately described. Because they aren't "Brown Sticker" many people don't think that they have an obligation to describe them fully (they're wrong of course, but when you're reviewing 60+ convention cards, it's often hard to notice and object to things like that - I don't think that Eric Kokish, Meckwell's coach, did before Beijing for instance).
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JanM, on Dec 15 2008, 02:25 AM, said:
You tell me why a natural weak 2M is legal with a 6 card suit and I'll tell you why my 3+ 2m bid is legal. How do you know what was intended by the definitions of natural? If they were "clearly" meant to apply only to 1-level bids, you think maybe they might have actually said that?
I'm not the expert on international bridge law and the ZAs, but I thought it was beyond the scope of the ACBL to regulate natural bidding if one read the laws carefully. Since the GCC specifically says 3+ minors are natural, with no reference to 1 level or 2 level etc, I think the only reasonable interpretation is that all natural bids are allowed. After all, otherwise there's no explicit rule allowing one to open a natural SAYC 1♥ or a standard weak 2♥ for example unless it's because they are natural under the given definitions.
Perhaps next time I run into someone questioning my 2♣ bids on 3 cards, I'll ask them to prove why their SAYC 1M and 2M bids are legal and hassle them since "disallow unless specifically allowed" is the rule, right?
JanM, on Dec 15 2008, 02:25 AM, said:
This is a pretty telling response - basically it's legal but if you play it the "establishment" will ban it (just like those Midchart weak twos on 4/4 two-suiters, right?). Not that I'm disagreeing with you - we've seen plenty of anecdotal evidence about the way the C&C committee operates in practice and what their biases are. Someone on the committee must like opening 5 card weak twos in 3rd position, or frankly I'm surprised they haven't banned those yet either.
Once again, you're deliberately exaggerating to try to make a point and your hyperbole makes me respond with things like diabolical and ridiculous. The "natural" 3 card minor would be interpreted to mean at the 1 level because that's what was intended, not because the "establishment" wants to ban something they don't happen to like. You know that a 3 card weak 2 bid is in a completely different universe from a 5 card weak 2 bid. You probably know that the drafters of the GCC (who admittedly didn't do a very good job, but there was a lot of ground to cover) could have limited the "3 card minors are natural" definition to "at the one level." You probably even know that that would be the appropriate thing to do. So you're just deliberately setting up a straw man. I don't know why, but I don't find it productive.