blackshoe, on 2012-March-21, 17:12, said:
Life is full of choices. Neither Aqua nor I has said we would require you to call the director. I did say that I would call the director if I was asked to disclose the meanings of potential future calls — and I would. Do you claim I do not have that right?
Sure, as a player you have the right to call the TD at any time (with the obvious exceptions).
The discussion is whether you, as a TD or the ACBL as an RA, have the right to say that a player doesn't need to disclose information that may be needed to understand the meaning of a bid that was made, particularly when this information defines the meaning of the bid. I would say that you, or the ACBL don't have that right.
Suppose a pair agreed on clubs as trumps. They use RKCB. At that point, it makes a big difference whether the pair plays 1430 or 0314. The 1430/0314 obviously refers to future calls. However, it clearly defines what hands can bid 4NT and which ones can't, because it defines the hands with which you can afford to bid 4NT. Thus, 4NT is not only asking for keycards, but -in context- also says how many keycards the 4NT bidder holds himself. This is clearly information from a bid that has been made and it is information that should, therefore, be disclosed when asked.
An opponent who wants to know could ask: "How many keycards does 4NT show?". You can predict the reply: "It doesn't show any keycards; it asks for keycards." It may well be that the explainer never realized that the 4NT bid actually shows (or implies) a certain number of keycards. In that case, he will not know the answer to the question, even if his partner will have the appropriate amount of keycards 99% of the time. Suppose now that the asking opponent knows how to count to 5. He can figure out how many keycards the 4NT bidder has, as long as he knows whether the responses are 1430 or 0314. He promises not to bother the opponents with difficult questions any more as soon as they tell him whether they play 1430 or 0314. They refuse, because this is a question about future responses.
Now, of course this is a question about future repsonse and, equally of course, it isn't. It is a question about the 4NT bid that was made. The question is asked because the replying player can't answer the real question. And this inability to answer the real question is not due to a lack of agreements (because they have an agreement about the meaning of 4NT and, of course, his partner won't bid 4NT if he can't afford to). It is due to a lack in general bridge skills or communication skills on the part of the player who is supposed to reply. The asker is accomodating to the lack in skills of the replying player, by asking a second question (how are your responses?) that the replying player is able to answer and which will give the asker the information that he is entitled to.
I suppose you could make it even more extreme: The replier actually understands that 4NT is implying a certain number of keycards. But he reasons that he infers that from the response structure, that the ACBL forbids him to disclose. He could reason that eventhough he knows how many keycards 4NT shows, he is not supposed to answer, because from the answer the asker may infer the response structure and even worse: his partner may infer the response structure!! His partner might get the UI how he understands the future system!!!
And so it boils down to the old question: Does the desire not to give UI to partner trump your duty to disclose your methods? We all know that it doesn't. Full disclosure trumps trying to prevent giving UI. So, if an opponent asks for the response structure, because he needs that information to understand the asking bid that was already made, give it to him. And your partner will get the UI that you know your system. There is worse UI you could give your partner.
Rik
I want my opponents to leave my table with a smile on their face and without matchpoints on their score card - in that order.
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the new discoveries, is not “Eureka!” (I found it!), but “That’s funny…” – Isaac Asimov
The only reason God did not put "Thou shalt mind thine own business" in the Ten Commandments was that He thought that it was too obvious to need stating. - Kenberg