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Too ethical?

#1 User is offline   Benoit35 

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Posted 2009-May-20, 05:36

Yesterday at the club, I picked up (approximately) this hand.

Kx
Txxx
AKxx
xxx

My partner, in 3rd seat, opened 1. We play Drury but I forgot it completely, so I responded 2. Partner alerted, and that's what made me realize my mistake. His rebid was 3.

I decided to (well, not really - I had read that in such a situation I had to) do the ethical thing and pretend I hadn't heard the Alert. Under No Drury, a 3 rebid would mean 16+ HCP and 6+ spades, so the spade game was in order. To pass 3 would have been unauthorized use of the information I gained from the Alert. I raised to 4 and we went down two.

My partner wasn't happy, and said I didn't need to add another mistake to my original one. After the session, I talked to the director and he, too, said I was under no obligation to compound my original mistake and bid game.

I'm still not convinced. Did I do the right thing, or did I needlessly throw away some matchpoints?
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#2 User is offline   helene_t 

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Posted 2009-May-20, 05:46

The director is wrong. You did the right thing.
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#3 User is offline   kenrexford 

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Posted 2009-May-20, 05:50

100% clear. The fact that a director has no clue about this situation and that your partner doesn't either is immaterial.
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#4 User is offline   whereagles 

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Posted 2009-May-20, 06:35

Being a Director myself, I congratulate you on your correct attitude.
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#5 User is offline   gwnn 

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Posted 2009-May-20, 06:49

I don't get it. What does a 3 rebid show in your system over 2 drury? Surely a good hand, no?
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#6 User is offline   Benoit35 

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Posted 2009-May-20, 06:53

Quote

I don't get it. What does a 3♠ rebid show in your system over 2♦ drury? Surely a good hand, no?

3 would have basically re-thrown the game invitation to me, so the UI definitely suggested passing.
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#7 User is offline   whereagles 

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Posted 2009-May-20, 07:08

If Benoit hadn't seen the alert, he would have kept thinking 2 was natural. Then 3 would be interpreted as a normal a spade good 1-suiter, making 4 obvious.

Note that you ARE allowed to notice you made a mistake and act accordingly. But in this case pard's alert made him realize the mistake and that's unauthorized info. Even if Benoit argued he did realize it before the alert, no Director would (should) buy that story :)

So in the end the attitude was correct.
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#8 User is offline   Benoit35 

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Posted 2009-May-20, 07:38

Quote

Even if Benoit argued he did realize it before the alert, no Director would (should) buy that story

Indeed, as the Alert card flew out of my partner's box almost before my own 2 card touched the table... :)
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#9 User is offline   TimG 

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Posted 2009-May-20, 10:20

I encountered a similar situation last weekend. I opened 2N showing a weak hand with the minors. LHO gave my partner a few seconds to alert, and when none was forthcoming asked my partner if he could see his convention card. In the process of showing our opponent the convention card, my partner saw the 2NT section of the card and was woken up to our agreement.

My partner said something like "I'm going to treat it as strong because I wasn't sure". At this point, the director was called. The director was a bit perplexed, but ruled that my partner indeed had to treat 2NT as strong, but that if the opponents took action he could wake up to the agreement. My LHO doubled, waking partner up, and the rest was uneventful.

But, I wonder whether the ruling was correct.

Suppose my partner did not alert (indicating that he has forgotten the agreement), the opponents look at our CCs so that they know our agreement and then my LHO doubles. My partner asks about the meaning of the double and is told "interest in penalizing at least one of opener's suits" or something similar which indicates the opponents are defending against something other than a strong balanced 2NT opening. Is partner allowed to be woken up by an opponent's explanation? The ruling we received basically seems to be saying: yes.
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#10 User is offline   jdonn 

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Posted 2009-May-20, 10:22

Both your attitude and your specific action were absolutely proper. Your partner being ignorant is one thing, but the director needs some serious training.
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#11 User is offline   skjaeran 

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Posted 2009-May-20, 11:25

You did the correct thing, as explained by others above.

If you hadn't raised to game and I had been called to the table by the (awake) opps, I'd have adjusted to 4-2.
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#12 User is offline   Tola18 

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Posted 2009-May-20, 12:09

TimG. As I understand, your director was absolutely correct.
Very correct also of all the around to be nice fellows, including the Lefty who helped your partner out.


Benoit. Here is a extra point: If nobody in your club is de facto bothering about some finer points of bridge-etics (very common in small clubs for example, with at best a non professional director),

so perhaps you DID threw away a trick unnecessarily.

This is perhaps worth a discussion.

There ARE apparently very often quite different behaviour standards in smaller clubs, and in serious competition / bigger clubs run by seasoned, well educated directors.
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#13 User is offline   peachy 

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Posted 2009-May-20, 18:34

Tola18, on May 20 2009, 01:09 PM, said:

TimG. As I understand, your director was absolutely correct.
Very correct also of all the around to be nice fellows, including the Lefty who helped your partner out.


Benoit. Here is a extra point: If nobody in your club is de facto bothering about some finer points of bridge-etics (very common in small clubs for example, with at best a non professional director),

so perhaps you DID threw away a trick unnecessarily.

This is perhaps worth a discussion.

There ARE apparently very often quite different behaviour standards in smaller clubs, and in serious competition / bigger clubs run by seasoned, well educated directors.

This is not a matter of "behavioral standards". It is a matter of law. Benoit35 did what the law required him to do, perhaps instinctively, perhaps because he knows what the law requires him to do/not do. If instinctively, it shows a high degree of natural integrity and strength of character. I applaud that.

The director was wrong and he is incompetent in not knowing what the law says about a situation like this one.
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#14 User is offline   Rossoneri 

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Posted 2009-May-21, 03:46

Agreed, this is a matter of law and not behavioural standards.
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#15 User is offline   Benoit35 

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Posted 2009-May-21, 06:31

Quote

Tola18, on May 20 2009, 01:09 PM, said:

TimG.  As I understand, your director was absolutely correct.
Very correct also of all the around to be nice fellows, including the Lefty who helped your partner out.


Benoit. Here is a extra point:  If nobody in your club is de facto bothering about some finer points of bridge-etics (very common in small clubs for example, with at best a non professional director),

so perhaps you DID threw away a trick unnecessarily.

This is perhaps worth a discussion.

There ARE apparently very often quite different behaviour standards in smaller clubs, and in serious competition / bigger clubs run by seasoned, well educated directors.

This is not a matter of "behavioral standards". It is a matter of law. Benoit35 did what the law required him to do, perhaps instinctively, perhaps because he knows what the law requires him to do/not do. If instinctively, it shows a high degree of natural integrity and strength of character. I applaud that.

The director was wrong and he is incompetent in not knowing what the law says about a situation like this one.

Well I didn't do this out of instinct. I already knew this club had its own "house rules", so to speak. I already had a hunch that obeying the Law might get me in more trouble than using the UI. Had I passed, that would have been the end of it - heck, my partner would have probably made 3 for a top (he lost track of a trump because he was busy wondering about my bidding), and on the off chance that our opponents had knows the rules and called the Director, he very likely would have brushed off their complaint.

Yes, such is the way the Laws are applied at our local club. So if I face the same situation again, I'm afraid I'm going to think twice about doing the same thing. ;)
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#16 User is offline   cicus 

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Posted 2009-May-21, 06:51

Benoit35, on May 20 2009, 07:53 AM, said:

Quote

I don't get it. What does a 3♠ rebid show in your system over 2♦ drury? Surely a good hand, no?

3 would have basically re-thrown the game invitation to me, so the UI definitely suggested passing.

Suggested passing? It would never occur to me to pass this hand with 2.5 quick tricks (in fact almost 3). Nearly an opener and it has improved during the bidding.
Gabor Szots
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#17 User is offline   Benoit35 

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Posted 2009-May-21, 09:53

Not playing Double Drury, it hasn't. Partner thinks I have 4-spade support so he isn't promising a 6th spade.
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#18 User is offline   cicus 

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Posted 2009-May-21, 10:32

Benoit35, on May 21 2009, 10:53 AM, said:

Not playing Double Drury, it hasn't. Partner thinks I have 4-spade support so he isn't promising a 6th spade.

I didn't expect a 6th spade... :)

However, 3NT may be a better bid than 4.
Gabor Szots
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#19 User is offline   JoAnneM 

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Posted 2009-May-21, 10:39

I don't get it. You have game points, why wouldn't you want to be in game regardless of the bidding snafu?
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#20 User is offline   Benoit35 

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Posted 2009-May-21, 11:32

We don't have game points, we play that 3 in response to Drury is a minimum opening hand (whereas 2 would have been sub-minimum) with no other feature worth bidding. Everybody else was in 2 or 3, making 8 or 9 tricks. Partner's first words when I tabled my cards were "You should have passed, partner."
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