Disclosure What are opponents entitled to know
#1
Posted 2015-April-27, 05:53
Widget is not as universally played as Stayman (another convention where people don't discuss continuations) nor as obscure as the Allerton multi-way 2D rebid. It's been written up in a couple of magazines and covered in one book; a google search finds 7 write-ups and it's in the ACBL defensive database.
It comes up at the table, and you make a Widget bid. It is absolutely clear that Widget applies here.
Subsequent investigation by the TD reveals that you think this bid has meaning A, your partner thinks it has meaning B and the write-ups of Widget unanimously say it has meaning C.
Your opponents are certainly entitled to know that you have agreed to play Widget and have had no further discussion.
Which, if any, of meanings A, B and C are your opponents (theoretically) also entitled to be told?
Gordontd and I don't agree on this, which is unusual and worries me.
#4
Posted 2015-April-27, 06:50
MickyB, on 2015-April-27, 05:56, said:
If both players knew that C was the only method written up anywhere, then I'd expect they would be playing it so it might be hard to disclose.
I'd expect to say that we have not discussed continuations, that options A,B, and C are often used and in our circles I'd expect method X to be more popular. I don't have a problem with telling the opponents effectively how I'm taking the bid because my partner understands the UI laws.
#5
Posted 2015-April-27, 06:52
#7
Posted 2015-April-27, 07:02
paulg, on 2015-April-27, 06:50, said:
I'd expect to say that we have not discussed continuations, that options A,B, and C are often used and in our circles I'd expect method X to be more popular. I don't have a problem with telling the opponents effectively how I'm taking the bid because my partner understands the UI laws.
Unfortunately, you are not aware of options B or C, and your partner is not aware of options A or C.
#8
Posted 2015-April-27, 07:09
The only agreement here is that a convention called Widget applies in this situation and that you play it. There is no 'agreement' about what the bid means, just that it is conventional.
#9
Posted 2015-April-27, 07:40
Whether they should be told A or B depends on the basis you and your partner have for thinking that makes up part of your agreement. If neither of us had given it any thought until it came up at the table the only explanation they are entitled to is "no agreement". If each of us assumed there was only one way to play Widget and trusted partner to believe the same it's more difficult. If there is doubt as to what we are playing the TD should presume there has been a mistaken explanation rather than a mistaken bid (law 75C) so they are entitled to an explanation of A.
If my partner and I agree to play the Landy defence to 1NT where a 2♣ overcall shows the majors, and we agree that partner will keep the auction alive with 2♦ if they have nothing useful to contribute (no preference or no suit of their own worth mentioning), then the following auction comes up that we haven't discussed:
1NT - 2♣(1) - X(2) - P(3)
(1) both majors
(2) values, looking for a penalty
(3) ???
A = nothing useful to say
B = bid your better major
C = willingness to play in clubs doubled
I could see myself as TD requiring overcaller to explain what he thinks the pass means (but not passer what he thinks it means, nor what the textbooks say it should mean).
#10
Posted 2015-April-27, 07:57
Therefore an explanation "Widget" is insufficient.
So you have to tell them A. You may express any uncertainty you may feel (that's often unhelpful to your opponents, but the truth is what they're entitled to).
Your partner has to correct that to B (but he may say that having heard your explanation he's in some doubt about it).
The TD may have to sort out what misinformation has occurred. The true explanation was "we agreed without realising it to play A from my side and B from partner's", so if opponents have been damaged by not knowing that they're entitled to redress.
C is irrelevant. Opponents are not entitled to have you tell them the contents of some online document you've never read.
#11
Posted 2015-April-27, 07:59
#12
Posted 2015-April-27, 08:13
#13
Posted 2015-April-27, 08:42
We aren't told whether the players involved haven't read any write-up of widget (although if that is the case, how do they know anything about it at all?) or they have read one (not necessarily the same one) and both forgotten. I don't think it should make much difference which is the case.
#14
Posted 2015-April-27, 08:43
There may be a disclosure problem involving what is written on the system card, if the RA's regulation requires more than just the name of the convention on the card. IAC, the "fix" to the problem, from your partnership's viewpoint, is to discuss A, B, and C, decide explicitly which meaning you're going to play, and write that on your system card, or in supplementary notes. As for the instant case, you're going to get an adverse MI ruling.
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
#15
Posted 2015-April-27, 08:52
New answer, None.
You bid widget, thinking A. Partner is asked and explains it as "widget but we have not discussed what it means, and it hasn't come up before." He cannot say how he interprets it, which is B.
If you end the bidding as declarer or dummy you cannot clarify it, because partner has not given a wrong explanation.
Opponents, on hearing the explanation, are likely to call the director, and he may ask each of you, in the absence of the other, to give your respective interpretations of A and/or B, but this is only if required by the director.
#16
Posted 2015-April-27, 08:55
fromageGB, on 2015-April-27, 08:52, said:
New answer, None.
You bid widget, thinking A. Partner is asked and explains it as "widget but we have not discussed what it means, and it hasn't come up before." He cannot say how he interprets it, which is B.
If you end the bidding as declarer or dummy you cannot clarify it, because partner has not given a wrong explanation.
Opponents, on hearing the explanation, are likely to call the director, and he may ask each of you, in the absence of the other, to give your respective interpretations of A and/or B, but this is only if required by the director.
Interesting, Theoretically, I suppose you're right about what partner should say. Practically, he's going to explain it as B (okay, if he's read this thread maybe not).
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
#17
Posted 2015-April-27, 08:59
They are entitled to your agreement.
You agreed to play Widget and nothing more. You haven't agreed to what "Widget" means. The opponents are only entitled to know your agreements. The meaning of "Widget" is not something you agree on, so the opponents are not entitled to that. So, they are entitled to "We agreed to play Widget (and perhaps when it applies), but that is all we agreed on."
You are supposed to tell what you know about your partner's bid. In this case, the partner of the Widget bidder "knows" that the Widget bid shows B (at least he thinks so). He doesn'tknow any better than that this is the agreement. So, he is supposed to explain: "That is the Widget convention, partner is showing B."
Now, the Widget bidder thinks that his partner has misexplained. At the appropriate time, the Widget bidder is supposed to call the TD and tell him: "We agreed to play Widget, but my partner got confused and he thought it showed B, but -quite obviously- it shows A."
At this point, it becomes clear that the widget bidder and his partner have completely different ideas about Widget. It also becomes clear that there is effectively no agreement.
Concrete, this means:
If the Widget pair ends up declaring, the defenders will know how the Widget bidder intended his bid. They will also know that there was a misunderstanding and can interpret the subsequent bidding with this information.
If an AS needs to be assigned, we assume that the opponents received the explanation: "We play Widget, but don't agree on what it means.", because that is the explanation of the agreement.
Rik
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
#18
Posted 2015-April-27, 09:01
FrancesHinden, on 2015-April-27, 07:02, said:
paulg, on 2015-April-27, 06:50, said:
I'd expect to say that we have not discussed continuations, that options A,B, and C are often used and in our circles I'd expect method X to be more popular. I don't have a problem with telling the opponents effectively how I'm taking the bid because my partner understands the UI laws.
Unfortunately, you are not aware of options B or C, and your partner is not aware of options A or C.
In such circumstances one of us is going to explain our singular understanding of Widget and this is going to be misinformation. I don't think, theoretically, I can expect players to disclose what they don't know and, therefore, option C is irrelevant.
#19
Posted 2015-April-27, 09:16
campboy, on 2015-April-27, 08:42, said:
On that basis, neither partner seems to be aware that C is a possibility, so it cannot possibly be right. I know that saying "widget" is frowned upon, but in reality "widget", and nothing more, is the partnerhip (mis)understanding.
#20
Posted 2015-April-27, 09:18
It seems to me that, at the point of the question, what I know is that we have agreed that the previous call was widget and carried an agreed-upon meaning, but that I am aware that we have not discussed what the last call meant. I may have a strong view that logically it should mean A (or B), but the fact is that we have no agreement, beyond what I think is implied by bridge logic.
I therefore think that all I ought to be saying is: 'we have not discussed this sequence, and it has never arisen before', and even the last part of that is probably surplus to requirements.
We definitely should not, in my view, volunteer how we think it ought to be played.
So at the table, subject to the conditions of contest, we say only that we have no agreement, and the opps are now fully informed and cannot conceivably claim that they have been misinformed.
There may be scope, if the conditions of contest or the rules in effect so provide, for some disciplinary penalty for playing an incompletely discussed gadget. However, in most events, at least in ACBLand, any harm done to the opps is the rub of the green. After all, unless widget is a destructive device, the odds are that a major misunderstanding will harm the users of the gadget more than the opps.