TMorris, on 2011-March-29, 10:55, said:
As the EBU pretty much split up doubles into takeout and penalty as part of their alerting rules is it really that surprising if people split up doubles in this way ie into alertable and non-alertable doubles which (barring a few exceptions) are penalty and non-penalty.
No, they have not. They have made the simplest alerting rules that are possible by splitting doubles into takeout and the rest for one regulation, and penalties and the rest for another.
ahydra, on 2011-March-29, 13:18, said:
bluejak, could you explain whether you would penalise NS for this fielded misbid? Certainly South fielded it, but he doesn't really have any idea (assuming no UI) that North misbid. West could easily have some of North's HCPs.
As a matter of regulation in England you cancel the board and give Ave+/Ave- if you judge it is a fielded misbid.
StevenG, on 2011-March-30, 05:02, said:
The problem is that the EBU has offered no guidance as to what is alertable in more complex situations. Jeremy's articles for English Bridge only covered the very basic situations and skirted carefully around anything more difficult.
I usually find that if partner doubles a low-level contract we will have no agreement about the specific sequence - after all, we have probably never doubled before in that sequence. We will however have a meta-agreement that it is takeout. But then the negative inferences from the fact that partner doubled rather than find a bid will add some very strong distributional constraints to partners hand, effectively making the double a constructive bid.
So, what then? Do I ponder for ten minutes or so trying to work out the probability that, over all possible deals that fit this particular sequence, I might choose to convert it to penalty? Or that partner could work out that I might choose to convert it to penalty? Just so that I can alert the bid as "not quite takeout"? Do I heck! After all, I know no more than the opponents.
Sorry EBU, but it is just too difficult for me.
No doubt it is, which is why no-one suggests you do such a complicated and unnecessary procedure. When he doubled did he
expect you to take it out? If so, it is takeout, if not, it isn't. Whether you do take it out is irrelevant. Slightly complicated by artificial doubles, which are alertable, but most people would understand that.
TMorris, on 2011-March-30, 05:35, said:
Well I did say "pretty much". I appreciate that there are a few cases that are neither take out or penalty but from where I am sitting the vast majority are either take-out (almost never alerted especially post August) or penalty (alerted if of a suit contract) [ignoring doubles over 3NT except again for a few special cases].
If the EBU splits things up differently from this then I would be grateful for a review of how.
I think if you asked 90%+ of EBU members they would say penalty of suit (alertable) or take-out (not alertable) & not be aware of any exceptions.
In many situations when you double you neither expect partner to take it out, nor expect him to leave it in. In such situations you are not surprised what he does dependent on his hand. Such doubles are neither takeout nor penalty.