Vampyr, on 2012-September-01, 09:20, said:
What "situation" is it that might come up? Is it, say, 4=4=4=1 inside the NT range? If the partnership has decided to handle these hands by opening 1NT, then it should be disclosed. Similarly if before discussing it they notice that they handle this holding by always opening 1NT; now they should make it explicit.
If a partnership is experienced enough to make these decisions, and if they've thought of the problem at all, sure. But many, many partnerships act on what they were taught when they learned the game (a 1NT opener shows a balanced no singleton, no void, no more than one doubleton hand of a defined point range) and have never given any thought to when it might be good to deviate from that. Granted many of them won't deviate from it ("I can't open 1NT, I have a singleton!") but some will sooner or later consider the possibility.
One of the problems here comes when the opponents complain "he can't open 1NT with a singleton!" because the TD is rarely going to have any clue how often this pair has done this before. We could say "one instance creates an implicit agreement", or we could tell the pair concerned that "you've had your one free shot, now you must either make this an explicit agreement, and disclose it properly, or never do it again". I'm certain the first of those is a bad way to handle it, and I'm not sure the second isn't also bad.
Vampyr, on 2012-September-01, 09:20, said:
Why is it suddenly coming up so often? Why is the player preferring 1NT to whatever the "systemic" bid is? Is there in fact no systemic bid for the hand? Maybe the player's preferences have changed sometime in the past three years; or... I don't know. I don't think it's good enough to hide behind "anti-systemic" if it happens... how often? Maybe a good threshold is, when it happens, partner is likely to say "I can't remember the last time she did that"
Let's noT go down the "hide behind" road. I'm not talking about trying to avoid disclosure obligations, or skirting the edges of cheating, I'm talking about figuring out what those obligations are, and avoiding any accusations of cheating by not cheating.
As I understand Standard American and 2/1, the systemic bid with 4441 is to open 1
♣ with a singleton diamond, and 1
♦ otherwise. The problem is "how do I convince partner I've got 16 points?" after I've done that. AFAIK there's no systemic way to do that*, and that's way people open 1NT with a stiff.
Another question: in jurisdictions where you're supposed to announce the NT range or where you say nothing about it, does an explicit or implicit agreement to open 1NT with a singleton make the bid alertable? I think the ACBL's position is that so long as you only do it 1% of the time (which effectively means you can only do it every other time the hand comes up) you don't alert. So by the rules, announcing the range is sufficient disclosure but it doesn't feel like it. Of course you'll mention it if they ask, but they almost never do. And how does "he did it just last month" affect the alerting and disclosure requirements for the 1minor openings? Sometimes when partner hasn't opened 1NT with a stiff in a while you can be pretty sure (or can you?) that if he opens 1minor, he won't have a 4441 in the 1NT range, because he would have opened that 1NT. And once he's opened his one in a hundred times 1NT, you know that the 1minor opening might include such a hand. Keeping all this straight so you can 1) have an idea what the heck partner is doing and 2) properly disclose everything to your opponents seems like an awful lot of work.
*In some cases, I suppose you might reverse, but then you're distorting your shape.