reasonable ruling?
#1
Posted 2010-November-10, 05:39
Bidding:
E/ALL
N E S W
P P P
2NT P 3H P
4S P 4NT P
5D P 5S* P
6S P P P
2NT - 20-22 balanced
3H - standard transfer
4S - super accept, no other special meaning
4NT - RKCB (S)
5D - 1/4 out of 5
5S* - considerable BIT, it took south about a minute to bid it
When the bidding concluded east called the TDand relayed the facts.
Both parties agreed to the facts as stated above.
The TD instructed the players to continue playing the board and score it normally for the time being while he considers his ruling.
Result: NS +1430
North hand:
KJTXX
AX
AQX
AQX
The TD eventually changed the score to: NS +680, EW -680
The TD stated that he had consulted with five players out of which two said they would pass 5S.
In his own words: "As 40% constitute PASS as a logical alternative to bidding 6S I've got no choice but to change the score accordingly."
For various reasons the team NS pair is part of decided not to appeal:
- Last match of the day, long trip home.
- Had they won the appeal they would still lose the match (for some reason how bad is the loss was of no concern to them.)
Anyway, the day after one of the team members posted this hand on an Israeli bridge forum asking whether this ruling was reasonable.
At this stage all I would like to say is that a heated discussion ensued and in fact is still going on at the forum.
I'm interested in hearing the opinions of this forum's members as to:
- what do you think of the ruling process
- do you find the poll result to match your thinking?
- do you think that east was acting in a spiteful manner by calling the TD and should not have called him to begin with?
You may find the following facts of relevance:
NS pair could be considered as advanced+ players.
This was the 12th board of a 16 boards match.
On the 10th board NS missed reaching a lay-down game as south decided to take the low road and invite rather than bid game by himself holding 12HCP and a fit opposite a 1st in hand vulnerable 1S opener.
#2
Posted 2010-November-10, 06:29
arikp111, on 2010-November-10, 05:39, said:
In his own words: "As 40% constitute PASS as a logical alternative to bidding 6S I've got no choice but to change the score accordingly."
[...]
I'm interested in hearing the opinions of this forum's members as to:
- what do you think of the ruling process
Yes, that's fine.
Quote
No, but that's why one has polls.
Quote
WTF?
-- Bertrand Russell
#3
Posted 2010-November-10, 06:34
Rather than be concerned about the Director's ruling, I would suggest that South thinks (hesitates) prior to bidding RKCB in the future and not put his partner in this position.
#4
Posted 2010-November-10, 07:05
Phil
#5
Posted 2010-November-10, 07:14
I think the director did fine.
I think the poll results are odd. I consider, and thought it common to consider, any form of Blackwood just a check to make sure the partnership is not off two aces (or keycards); when Blackwood reveals only one missing card, the partnership is committed to slam. Here, opener knows the partnership is off only one keycard, so it should be routine to bid slam (and passing would not be a LA).
#6
Posted 2010-November-10, 07:20
We seem to have two threads on the same hand!
Merseyside England UK
EBL TD
Currently at home
Visiting IBLF from time to time
<webjak666@gmail.com>
#7
Posted 2010-November-10, 08:23
I can see no reason why East should not have called the director and find an allegation that it is spiteful extraordinary.
There are some sequences where a sign off can be accepted if the player has the higher not lower number of Aces but I don't think there can be any hands where South would open 2NT, super accept and have one key card therefore for whatever reason North has doubts and I don't think South can over rule after the slow 5S bid so put me down as one of the 40%.
#8
Posted 2010-November-10, 08:25
Expect partner to have Axxxxx, KQx, xx, xx at worst where there's just room for you to hold QJxx, Jx, KQJ, AKQJ.
#9
Posted 2010-November-10, 08:43
It is unacceptable to criticise East for calling the TD. The manner in which he called the TD is a different matter, but we weren't told anything about that.
#10
Posted 2010-November-10, 08:50
Cyberyeti, on 2010-November-10, 08:25, said:
Expect partner to have Axxxxx, KQx, xx, xx at worst where there's just room for you to hold QJxx, Jx, KQJ, AKQJ.
This is not a super-accept in my book. I believe the super-accept removes the 1 or 4 keycard dilemma.
#11
Posted 2010-November-10, 09:23
1: Is it possible for South to be in doubt that North has 4 rather than 1 keycard after this auction?
2: What values does North possess in addition to what he has already shown in order to justify the raise to 6?
Once a poll is not unanimous for raising to 6 I agree with TD, and I frown on the subsequent events that apparently have occurred.
#12
Posted 2010-November-10, 10:10
paulg, on 2010-November-10, 08:50, said:
Doesn't matter about your book (or mine), matters about theirs, it would however be a super accept in mine, we bid 4(side suit) with Hxx trumps and HHxxx in the side suit, leaving 3N and 4♠ as the min/max 4 card support bids. We only fail to break with 4 card support with a minimum 4333. If you don't like the hand I gave, try QJxxx, AJ, KQJ, KQJ, not very pretty but with 5 spades I think most people will super accept.
#13
Posted 2010-November-10, 10:40
The answer to the thread's title question is a clear no. I think it was a terrible ruling.
There is no such thing in normal bidding as a sign off opposite 4 key cards. Pass is not a LA.
All the talk about what constitutes a super acceptance or what responder might be able to calculate about opener's key cards is irrelevant, because responder really didn't have to go into all that speculation. Responder can trust opener not to stay out of slam with 4 out of 5 key cards, so speculative calculations are not necessary. This is just very ordinary bidding really.
#14
Posted 2010-November-10, 13:16
jeremy69, on 2010-November-10, 08:23, said:
bluejak, on 2010-November-10, 07:20, said:
#15
Posted 2010-November-10, 19:01
nige1, on 2010-November-10, 13:16, said:
I wondered about that, but the posts tend to follow a sequence of development. If I merge them then it might confuse the sequences. Anyway, rightly or wrongly, that is why I did not.
Merseyside England UK
EBL TD
Currently at home
Visiting IBLF from time to time
<webjak666@gmail.com>
#16
Posted 2010-November-11, 00:44
I posted these questions here as on the the Israeli thread there were IMHO some peculiar comments and I wanted a second opinion (and hopefully more... )
Some thought the TD did wrong by even going through the process of consulting with five players.
They believe the case is so clear cut that the score (NS +1430) should have been upheld on the spot.
Others even went further and claimed that I should not have called the TD and that calling him was ill-judged, petty and quarrelsome.
As for the result of the ruling - in similarity to the opinions expressed here - most of the repliers said that had they been on the poll they would allow the 6S call.
FWIW I think that the 6S call should be disallowed and changing the score to 5S+1 is the correct thing to do.
Here is my reasoning -
I believe both N and S should know that 5D shows unconditionally 4 KC hence 5S is a clear sign-off.
I agree that generally when asking for KC and getting a 4 KC reply should mean slam is to be bid but this case is an exception.
I can think of several hands S (the 5S bidder) can have, in the context of the bidding thus far, where he has no KC and will only bid slam when PD shows all the KC.
It might be bad practice to use RKCB in this instance but still...
Some of the repliers (on the Israeli forum) said that they would bid the slam on grounds that "what possibly more can N have"
I've two issues with this statement.
1. I believe RKCB is simply a question, it doesn't hold any invitational overtones to it,
hence N is not entitled to apply judgment unless his answer to RKCB has been ambiguous, which is not the case here.
2. For sake of argument, let's assume that N (the 2NT opener) is allowed to bid slam based on the quality of his hand.
I think that in the context of super-accepting N has a minimum and therefore PASS is a LA.
The hand can be made better in several aspects - more KC, more controls, having a good side suit.
Furthermore, few boards earlier S made a serious underbid which led to NS missing a cold game.
Might not the BIT help N just enough to bid the slam on the premise that S did it again?
Finally, let me digress on the issue of whether a 2NT super accept hand can hold just one KC.
To begin with I ran a simulation of 100000 2NT opening hands, I didn't quantify into the parameters a fit in S or anything else that might imply super-accept.
I asked how many KC do these hands hold, I nominated the SK arbitrarily as the 5th KC.
The results were:
0 KC 0%
1 KC 0.46%
2 KC 14.47%
3 KC 51.33%
4 KC 31.34%
5 KC 2.4%
As can be seen 4 KC is about 68 times more likely than 1 KC, I think that if we factor in super accepting then the ratio would be way bigger.
Now, I would like to claim that by definition super accepting should no be done with 1 KC.
Even with the example hands presented on this thread e.g. QJxxx, AJ, KQJ, KQJ or QJxx, Jx, KQJ, AKQJ one should notsuper accept.
why is that?
Say I bid just 3S -
if PD passes for sure he doesn't hold an Ace so game is off the top - GOOD.
if PD bids 3NT I can cue-bid to show a good hand for S.
if PD invites sometime further in the bidding I'm going to cooperate adamantly.
To summarize, I can see no wrong coming out of bidding just 3S with these hands.
#17
Posted 2010-November-11, 01:18
arikp111, on 2010-November-11, 00:44, said:
Clearly not an interested party then.
Quote
hence N is not entitled to apply judgment unless his answer to RKCB has been ambiguous, which is not the case here.
This I agree with. RKCB answers the question: "Do we have 2 keycards missing?". It can also answer the question:"Do we have 1 keycard plus the trump queen missing?" which is also sometimes a relevant question. If you believe RKCB is simply answering these questions then you cannot pass here. If the E-W agreement is, as stated, that 5S demands a bid of slam with 4 key cards then you cannot pass here. The issue I have is that if E-W have this agreement then what was Responder thinking about? Personally I would have no problem with either opponent calling the TD about this but I would be pretty upset if the TD ruled that 6S should not be bid.
#20
Posted 2010-November-11, 03:25