bluejak, on 2012-October-31, 13:50, said:
The basic problem seems to me that the scientific sort of player expects to have various agreements in all sequences, and forgets that not everyone is like him. When I play in clubs many people do not have agreements as to the meaning of the sequence 1NT 2
♣ 2
♥ 2
♠ and thus have no particular reason to respond one major rather than the other. But some of those people will have an agreement, not usually based on logic, but on something they have heard, or been told.
When playing in England generally, if the sequence goes 1NT 2
♣ 2major, it is normal and not therefore surprising that a pair
- responds 2♥ with both majors
- responds 2♠ with both majors
- responds at random with both majors
- responds on some other basis with both majors, eg bids the stronger suit
None of these are particularly unusual, so none is alertable under EBU regulations.
It is unfortunate that many players, with the best will in the world, assume that you should alert something if you have an agreement. The alerting rules do not say that, and people who do this alert too often, and tend to denigrate [completely unintentionally] the alerting system. Fortunately there are not too many of them.
Of course, this is behind screens. Writing things down when playing behind screens in excess of what you would normally alert does little harm.
David, do you and I play in the same country? In London it is very unusual for opener to respond 2
♠; playing standard methods, he has to respond 2
♥ so that 2
♠ is available for partner to show an invitational hand with four spades.
This is not as necessary when playing, say, that 2
♣ promises a 4-card major, but still the same logic applies as you cannot play in 2
♠ with an invitational hand opposite a minimum if responder has already bid 3
♠. So I would find a 2
♠ bid with both majors very unusual, as would, I suspect, most of my peers.
David, your examples always seem to involve clueless people, who have no agreement about pretty much any sequence, and who have not considered, individually or as a partnership, the consequences or implications of various treatments, or how different sequences might show different hands; who, in short, bid pretty much at random. I refuse to believe that this is a fair characterisation of Midlands bridge.
If you think that having a little logic behind the bids one makes makes one "scientific", then so be it. In this case I think that there are far more "scientific" players than you think there are.
Also, a player who uses a standard CC provided by the club is not necessarily "scientific", even if the methods on the card dictate that he must bid hearts first.
I know not with what weapons World War III will be fought, but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones -- Albert Einstein