mgoetze, on 2011-June-24, 02:38, said:
Not where I play, fortunately.
Ahem... if your profile says "SAYC" then it means you are playing Jacoby 2NT. There are not many different versions of SAYC, there is only one. It is defined by the ACBL, and includes Jacoby 2NT.
http://web2.acbl.org.../play/SP3%20(bk)%20single%20pages.pdf
If your profile simply said "Standard American" or "Better Minor" or whatever, that would be a different matter.
Yes, u r correct about what the ACBL Sayc says. My post was a good example of hasty, emotional posting because i was conflating opening one of a major & one of a minor.
1 cl/di -- 2nt was always, I believe, and still is, 13-15 on the Standard American Yellow Card, the Standard American Green Card and the Standard American Orange Card.
Yet it is true that i have had people respond "jacoby?" at this site to my one of a minor openings, and they pass 1cl-2nt sequences quite often, even when only Sayc is on their profile.
A large percentage of the people who play in the Relaxed Room in particular put "Sayc" on their profile, but respond to 1 of a Major with 2nt 13-15, bal., or 11-12 bal.
The 13-15ers can be somewhat excused because the ACBL does not teach Jacoby Two NT as part of its lessons. If u go to the "Bidding in the 21st Century Teacher Manual" at the same ACBL site (sounds promising doesn't it?) u can find examples on p. 80 of auctions 1 M - 2nt, with bal. 13-15.
This is how it was done on the Standard American Green Card and the Standard American Yellow Card back in the 80s. But if memory serves me correctly, the Standard American Orange Card had Jacoby 2NT and a few other of the common at that time conventions, so it could be perceived as a "step up" from the Standard American Yellow Card.
The SAGC evolved into Audrey Grant's Club Series (which improved it through simplification).
I am not sure exactly when the SAYC was revised to include Texas & Jacoby 2NT (there was still a bit of a war going on between supporters of Texas & South African Transfers) -- the Orange Card was never used by anybody really, because once people thought they had mastered the Green & the Yellow, they felt it was time to individualize their systems. Orange cards only came out at our club for individual events, where u could flip from the one standard profile to the other.... the green & yellow cards were always dog-eared, but the Orange ones pristine....
The REAL reason these cards came out, in my opinion, is that alerting was driving players crazy at the time -- every three months the Board of Directors was changing around what had to be alerted and what didn't (and what was being allowed to be played, and then they added ANNOUNCEMENTS too!). It was just a side benefit that the pre-filled-out cards could be used by the students too lazy to fill out a regular Convention Card at our ACBL sanctioned university club. (I was playing Polish Club at the time -- SHHH, don't report me to the Downvote Police!)
Sayc has been revised, and I guess the point I was trying to get to in my sadly confused way was that the SAYC genie is out of the bottle with on-line play... 1 cl/1 di -- 2nt (inv.) is destined to become "Standard" some day soon. Right now it is a coin flip, unless pard's profile is laid out so logically that one feels confident about it.