How much are they entitled to know?
#1
Posted 2011-January-24, 03:13
1♣-(1♥)-3♦-(Pass)-
3NT-All Pass
During the auction the 1♥ bidder asked my partner what the 3♦ bid meant and she said we had not agreed anything. After the auction the 1♥ bidder asked me (I bid 3♦), what it actually was. He claimed that I was obligated to tell him what I meant by the bid regardless of what we had agreed (he has done a TD course but it still seemed strange to me, then again I don't know much about bridge laws). I said a 2♦ would be forcing but that 3♦ was undiscussed. How much am I forced to reveal about my hand in such situations? I realise this may change slightly from region to region but it seemed a bit odd that I would be forced to provide more information to the opponents than my partner.
On the actual hand I just had a weak hand in ♦s and the contract was not going to win more or less tricks on any defence, so this is mostly a question of curiosity. This happened at a club in Belgium. Thoughts?
#2
Posted 2011-January-24, 03:51
jschafer, on 2011-January-24, 03:13, said:
1♣-(1♥)-3♦-(Pass)-
3NT-All Pass
During the auction the 1♥ bidder asked my partner what the 3♦ bid meant and she said we had not agreed anything. After the auction the 1♥ bidder asked me (I bid 3♦), what it actually was. He claimed that I was obligated to tell him what I meant by the bid regardless of what we had agreed (he has done a TD course but it still seemed strange to me, then again I don't know much about bridge laws). I said a 2♦ would be forcing but that 3♦ was undiscussed. How much am I forced to reveal about my hand in such situations? I realise this may change slightly from region to region but it seemed a bit odd that I would be forced to provide more information to the opponents than my partner.
On the actual hand I just had a weak hand in ♦s and the contract was not going to win more or less tricks on any defence, so this is mostly a question of curiosity. This happened at a club in Belgium. Thoughts?
Law 20F5:
{a} A player whose partner has given a mistaken explanation may not correct the error during the auction, nor may he indicate in any manner that a mistake has been made. ‘Mistaken explanation’ here includes failure to alert or announce as regulations require or an alert (or an announcement) that regulations do not require.
{b} The player must call the Director and inform his opponents that, in his opinion, his partner’s explanation was erroneous (see Law 75) but only at his first legal opportunity, which is
(i) for a defender, at the end of the play.
(ii) for declarer or dummy, after the final pass of the auction.
"Undiscussed" is misinformation as it does not give any explanation of the information intended with the 3♦ bid, consequently you must immediately after the final pass of the auction (independent of any defender's request) call the director and offer the explanation of this unexplained bid to opponents.
I consider failing to automatically do so being a minor infraction of the laws, but once asked you are required to fully explain your call.
(Let us discard any possibility of the 3♦ bid having been made completely at random with no intended meaning, shall we?)
#3
Posted 2011-January-24, 04:56
pran, on 2011-January-24, 03:51, said:
I consider failing to automatically do so being a minor infraction of the laws, but once asked you are required to fully explain your call.
(Let us discard any possibility of the 3♦ bid having been made completely at random with no intended meaning, shall we?)
I don't understand this reply at all! Why do you think "undiscussed" is MI? My reading of the OP is that it is exactly the correct info. Just because the person who bid 3♦ was obviously hoping his partner would get the message doesn't mean there is any agreement about what it means.
One thing at least is clear is that the bidder should definitely NOT be telling the opponents what he meant by the bid if this is not the subject of any partnership agreement, either explicit or implicit.
#4
Posted 2011-January-24, 06:05
1. When you bid 3♦ you intended (and expected!) your pd to understand it (as weak).
This by itself means to me that (even if you didnt specifically discuss it), you assumed you had an understanding , coming from some past experience, or your common bridge background or whatever.
2. After being asked , I suggest you can volunteer the correct explanation , even if not obliged by law.
I think providing the opps with the explanation preserves the logic and integrity of the hand , and allows everybody to play the hand (make the lead..) while applying their bridge judgement. Is that a bad thing?
Would you really prefer that your opponent assumed (for example) that 3♦ was a splinter agreeing clubs, and made a poor lead because of that?
#5
Posted 2011-January-24, 06:26
WellSpyder, on 2011-January-24, 04:56, said:
One thing at least is clear is that the bidder should definitely NOT be telling the opponents what he meant by the bid if this is not the subject of any partnership agreement, either explicit or implicit.
Opponents are entitled to a full explanation of every call according to partnership explicit or implicit understanding. "Undiscussed" is no such explanation; it is only information that whatever understanding exists must be an implicit understanding of which the explainer is unaware. And when the bidder realizes that his partner has not correctly explained this implicit understanding according to what the bidder believes it to be then he has the duty to inform opponents correspondingly. This in most cases means that he must indeed tell opponents what he meant by the bid.
mich-b, on 2011-January-24, 06:05, said:
1. When you bid 3♦ you intended (and expected!) your pd to understand it (as weak).
This by itself means to me that (even if you didnt specifically discuss it), you assumed you had an understanding , coming from some past experience, or your common bridge background or whatever.
2. After being asked , I suggest you can volunteer the correct explanation , even if not obliged by law.
I think providing the opps with the explanation preserves the logic and integrity of the hand , and allows everybody to play the hand (make the lead..) while applying their bridge judgement. Is that a bad thing?
Would you really prefer that your opponent assumed (for example) that 3♦ was a splinter agreeing clubs, and made a poor lead because of that?
You are welcome, showing a very good understanding of the laws on disclosure! Your only mistake here is the impression that a player is not obliged by law. The law is that not only is he obliged, he is obliged to offer correct information even without being asked!
#6
Posted 2011-January-24, 07:23
pran, on 2011-January-24, 06:26, said:
It is if they haven't discussed it and have no implicit agreement. Such situations do occur.
pran, on 2011-January-24, 06:26, said:
Even you don't say in all cases.
London UK
#7
Posted 2011-January-24, 07:28
Quote
London UK
#8
Posted 2011-January-24, 07:50
mich-b, on 2011-January-24, 06:05, said:
1. When you bid 3♦ you intended (and expected!) your pd to understand it (as weak).
This by itself means to me that (even if you didnt specifically discuss it), you assumed you had an understanding , coming from some past experience, or your common bridge background or whatever.
2. After being asked , I suggest you can volunteer the correct explanation , even if not obliged by law.
I think providing the opps with the explanation preserves the logic and integrity of the hand , and allows everybody to play the hand (make the lead..) while applying their bridge judgement. Is that a bad thing?
Would you really prefer that your opponent assumed (for example) that 3♦ was a splinter agreeing clubs, and made a poor lead because of that?
I agree with most of this. As a player in this position, I will typically say something (ostensibly to my partner) like "didn't we agree to play this as a fit bid?" or "doesn't it have to be weak if 2D is forcing?". Hopefully the oppo will be able to work out from this what I thought I was showing! But I would think twice before answering an opponent who said I had to tell him what I meant by the bid - and I would probably call the TD before giving an appropriate answer.
#9
Posted 2011-January-24, 08:29
gordontd, on 2011-January-24, 07:23, said:
I wrote:
Opponents are entitled to a full explanation of every call according to partnership explicit or implicit understanding. "Undiscussed" is no such explanation.
and I maintain that "Undiscussed" may be an explanation for why the player is unable to comply with the laws on disclosure, but it is certainly no explanation on any call.
If players use a call without any explicit or implit agreement it means that they have an implicit agreement that this call shall have no meaning at all. Such an agreement is probably illegal in any bridge jurisdiction.
gordontd, on 2011-January-24, 07:23, said:
I wrote:
This in most cases means that he must indeed tell opponents what he meant by the bid.
It does occationally happen that partner eventually remembers the true explanation so that the player does not have to explain his call himself.
#10
Posted 2011-January-24, 09:19
pran, on 2011-January-24, 08:29, said:
Imagine the following scenario:
Partner A "Do you play 1430 RKCB or 3041?"
Partner B "Either, which do you play?"
At this point, someone spills there coffee all over the table, and by the time it is cleared up they are into round 1.
During the auction, A (probably foolishly!) bids 4N RKCB. Now are you saying partner B has no legal call??? The rest of the table will probably get rather bored if he simply sits there until the TD calls the move...
#11
Posted 2011-January-24, 09:21
pran, on 2011-January-24, 08:29, said:
No it doesn't. It means they hope their partner will guess correctly, and they'll put up with the consequences otherwise.
I often play with the minimum of discussion with my partners (filling in), and when I make a bid that I have not discussed with a partner with whom I have not played before, it is certainly not because we "have an implicit agreement that this call shall have no meaning at all." It is because we have no agreement as to what its meaning shall be.
London UK
#12
Posted 2011-January-24, 09:26
pran, on 2011-January-24, 08:29, said:
I think my further reduction of what you wrote above reveals its foolishness, Sven.
London UK
#13
Posted 2011-January-24, 09:51
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
#14
Posted 2011-January-24, 10:39
#15
Posted 2011-January-24, 13:42
If I sit down at the club with a total stranger and say 'Acol, weak two, standard leads and signals', then is it really true that we have no implicit agreements? After 1♠-2♣-2♦ I would expect 3♠ with this partner to be non-forcing. If our agreement was Standard American I would expect 3♠ to be forcing. Depending on who the opponents are, my partner and I may actually know an awful lot more than they do about sequences we have never discussed. Even more so if the partner is not a total stranger even if you haven't played with them much, or at all.
Of course, 'undiscussed' is adequate if you really have no explicit or implicit agreement. But I think it is overused and suggests 'your guess is as good as mine'. When in fact, the opponents' guess will seldom be as good as yours.
#16
Posted 2011-January-24, 14:06
"We haven't discussed this call, but 2D would be forcing."
I would add what 3D would mean without the overcall (as partner; not necessarily as your hand if it would likely lead to them misguessing). If you played weak jump shifts not in competition, I would particularly say that.
For my regular partner, assuming I didn't have a discussion about this auction, I would say "undiscussed, but 2D would be forcing. Without the overcall, it would be a limit splinter for clubs, but, as we have agreed that we can only splinter in opponents' suits after an overcall, it can't be that now. Again, without the overcall, the only weak jump shifts we play are 1 minor - 2 major."
The opponents are entitled to your agreements, and any specific-to-the-partnership inferences partner could use to make up his mind. They are not, however, entitled to the contents of your hand (except after the opening lead, of course).
#17
Posted 2011-January-24, 17:38
gordontd, on 2011-January-24, 09:21, said:
I often play with the minimum of discussion with my partners (filling in), and when I make a bid that I have not discussed with a partner with whom I have not played before, it is certainly not because we "have an implicit agreement that this call shall have no meaning at all." It is because we have no agreement as to what its meaning shall be.
gordontd, on 2011-January-24, 09:26, said:
On the contrary your own posts reveal that your call conveys the meaning which you hope your partner will guess correctly.
This is the meaning that opponents are entitled to be told! If they are told differently then you have a case of misinformation.
#18
Posted 2011-January-24, 19:53
pran, on 2011-January-24, 17:38, said:
This is the meaning that opponents are entitled to be told! If they are told differently then you have a case of misinformation.
Whether the opponents are entitled to that meaning depends on the basis of his hope. If it's general bridge knowledge (GBK), then the opponents are not entitled to be told the meaning. Aside from that, what you're saying is that if partner makes a call hoping that I'll figure out what the hell he's doing, and I get it wrong, I'm toast. If I get it right, but think that the basis is GBK, I'm toast. I don't know what this game is, but I don't want to play it.
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
#19
Posted 2011-January-24, 21:24
The suggestion that a call which is undiscussed but a player is hoping his partner will take it some way creates an implicit agreement is crazy, off the planet, but also means that the person concerned does not understand the principles of playing with a scratch partner, or a parter who is not scratch but it inexperienced and/or unscientific. It is perfectly normal to produce such a call when no call suits which is the subject of an agreement. To take an extreme case, I sit down to play with someone whose partner is going to be late, we have no discussion whatever, I do not know who she is or even where from, and she opens 1NT. We have no agreement implicit or explicit but assuming we are in England and over 50 miles from London I shall assume it is 12 to 14 and have a high expectation of being right. If I was in the Netherlands I should assume it was 15 to 17. Neither is based on an implicit agreement: both are based on General Bridge Knowledge.
As to the original question if you had no agreement explicit or implicit then you do not have to tell the opponents anything. That is a matter of Law so it is a correct answer throughout the world. But you have to be careful to disclose anything disclosable that might be relevant, of example if you knew whether 2♦ was forcing you should tell opponents that.
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#20
Posted 2011-January-25, 02:09
The spirit of the game is "you make a bid, all 3 other players understand its meaning , and proceed using this information to the best of their ability" rather than "you make a bid , nobody knows what it means , everybody take their best guess, and proceed playing the hand in the dark".
Btw , this practice is very much the norm in online play in BBO. When 2 non-regular players play together , and one of them makes a bid which can have one of several meaning, the opps will usually allow/ask him to announce the meaning out loud for the benefit of his partner and the defenders , and to protect the logic of the hand, and everybodys enjoyment.
I am very much aware that current laws do not support this - I just think that players can do it themselves - it is in their own interest.