Acol what defines it
#1
Posted 2015-April-02, 14:45
I play Acol. I know there are many other systems and I am vaguely aware of the defining features of Standard American (SAYC). I would describe the defining features of Acol as 4cm and WkNT and the defining features of SAYC as 5cm and StNT. Can you play 5cm and StNT and say that you are playing Acol?
#2
Posted 2015-April-02, 15:10
Acol is a somewhat vague concept which different sources define in different ways and there is no single authority that can unambigously be said to be "the" Acol authority. Maybe back in the days when Acol was invented the Acol club in London was "the" authority, but the system has evolved a lot since then, and in somewhat divergent directions. In the Netherlands "Acol" implies that you play strong NT and that you open the lower of two four card suits (although, to be fair, textbooks tend to call this style "Dutch Acol" rather than merely Acol). Similarly, Swiss Acol is 5-card spades and 4-card hearts.
On the British Islands almost everybody who call their system "Acol" play weak notrump but in my experience most do not see the weak notrump as a defining characteristic of the system. This is because historically Acol was played with a variable notrump.
Historically some of the features that distinguished Acol from Standard American were:
- light openings
- limit raises (1♥-(pass)-3♥ was forcing in SA back then)
But today, SA has adopted limit raises as well, and many open just as light as the English do.
If we limit the discussion to English and Scotish Acol, then 4-card majors probably is a defining characteristic of Acol. While some players may call their system Acol even if they play 5-card majors, I don't think there are any major textbooks that do so.
If someone call their system "Acol with 5-card majors and strong notrump" you might wonder why they don't just call it SA. Maybe the defining characteristic of Acol would, in that case, be the low forcing character of 2-level responses:
1♥-2♣
2♥*
would be forcing for most SA pairs (certainly for those who play according to reasonably modern textbooks) while nonforcing for almost all Acol pairs.
#3
Posted 2015-April-02, 16:04
"Robin Barker is a mathematician. ... All highly skilled in their respective fields and clearly accomplished bridge players."
#4
Posted 2015-April-02, 17:32
RMB1, on 2015-April-02, 16:04, said:
I think so too. I do not really use labels, but when I play 5-card majors/weak NT I would, if pressed, call it 5-card Major Acol.
#5
Posted 2015-April-03, 07:17
So yes, I accept that there discrepancies on what the values are for calls in standard Acol but there must be a boundary beyond which it is not i.e. there must be something(s) which are so fundamental to Acol and any other system which must be else you are can't be said to be playing that system. For example I would argue that if you are playing a StNT you cannot describe the system you play as Acol.
Why is it important? I believe that the EBU rules require anything that is a partnership agreement should be alerted i.e. if your are playing with values that are outside the range of standard Acol it should be alerted. If that is correct there must be something that defines what is and what is not standard Acol.
I also note that BBO has an 'Acol' Club and that the rules of that Club are that everyone playing there must play Acol which implies that Acol must be definable?
#6
Posted 2015-April-03, 07:21
#7
Posted 2015-April-03, 07:29
euclidz, on 2015-April-03, 07:17, said:
No, the EBU alert rules do not refer to "Acol". There are plenty of styles which are not Acol and which are not alertable. For example, a 1♥ or 1♠ opening promising 5+ cards in the suit is not alertable.
It would be nice to know what it means when opps put "General approach: Acol" on their CC, though. But I think trying to establish a uniform meaning of the word "Acol" is a futile excersize. By the way, it's not any clearer if they state "SA" or "Precision" as their general approach.
As for the strength of a 2/1 response: I believe 8+, 9+ and 10+ are all well within what is commonly understood as Acol style. I must say don't quite understand the 10+ criterion, though. Don't you want to be in game opposite a balanced 15-16 with most 9-counts?
By the way, if someone tell you that their 2/1 responses show five cards they are probably not telling you the truth. In Lawrence's original style, a 2/1 response promised an unbalanced hand so it would always be 5+ cards except that 1♠-2♣ could be 1444. But that's a 5-card major system in which 1M-2NT is 13+ and 1M-1NT is 5-12. In Acol you can't play that way so you have to make 2/1 responses on balanced hands sometimes.
#8
Posted 2015-April-03, 09:01
helene_t, on 2015-April-03, 07:29, said:
Could it not be argued that Acol is a system of 4cm's i.e. it is a system that presumes that a player opening 1♥ or 1♠ will hold a minimum of 4 cards in that suit and that any partnership playing Acol who have agreed that they will not open 1 of a major with less than 5 cards in that suit (i.e. they play 5cm's) must alert it?
#9
Posted 2015-April-03, 09:43
euclidz, on 2015-April-03, 09:01, said:
If they only open 5-card majors, then they're not really playing Acol, it seems. But that's really irrelevant as regarding alerting. You don't alert a bid just because it doesn't match the "General Approach" system, you alert bids that your jurisdiction's alerting regulation says you must alert. So unless the alerting regulation says that 5-card major openings must be alerted, you don't alert them -- it doesn't matter what you call your system.
#10
Posted 2015-April-03, 12:53
White Book 2014 Players
10 July 2014
1.3.1. A player must alert any inferences drawn from partnership experience or practice which have a potentially unexpected meaning. A call with an alertable meaning arising from an implicit understanding must be alerted.
A player who is not sure whether or not a call made is alertable should alert it. If there is no partnership understanding about the meaning of the call, the player should say so rather than say how is going to treat it.
#11
Posted 2015-April-04, 07:51
euclidz, on 2015-April-03, 12:53, said:
White Book 2014 Players
10 July 2014
1.3.1. A player must alert any inferences drawn from partnership experience or practice which have a potentially unexpected meaning. A call with an alertable meaning arising from an implicit understanding must be alerted.
A player who is not sure whether or not a call made is alertable should alert it. If there is no partnership understanding about the meaning of the call, the player should say so rather than say how is going to treat it.
has no relevance to alerting a 1M opening. a 4-card/5-card major is not an unexpected meaning. Even people playing 5-card majors do open 4-carders on occasion.
#12
Posted 2015-April-04, 09:23
Also, you mentioned that it is a rule in the Acol Club that everyone must play Acol. That is also not true - I have played all of Strong Club relay (many times), 2/1 (once) and SA/SAYC (a few times) there. What is true is that you need to ask opponents if they are comfortable with that - if not then you need to either play Acol or leave the table and find other opponents. In practise no opponent has ever objected, which given the highly artificial nature of the forcing club system we played says something about the tolerance of the membership.
Finally, you state that the EBU alerting regulations specify alerting non-Acol calls but this is untrue - some standard Acol bids must be alerted and some non-Acol calls should not be. And no, you should not alert 5 card majors, nor 3 card minors. You can visit the EBU Laws & Ethics page to read more about alerting rules, either in summary form or in full using the Blue Book link.
#13
Posted 2015-April-04, 09:40
#14
Posted 2015-April-05, 04:41
Zelandakh, on 2015-April-04, 09:23, said:
In fact, I don't know what the rules are or if there are any rules; does the Acol Club have any rules? It does seem a little odd that someone would form a 'Club' and call it the 'Acol' Club where it is not necessary to play Acol!
Why, when there is a 'Main' Bridge club and many other 'Clubs' playing many other systems (e.g.)SAYC would anyone who plays SAYC want to slot themselves amongst a group playing Acol?
#15
Posted 2015-April-05, 04:47
#16
Posted 2015-April-05, 07:35
euclidz, on 2015-April-03, 09:01, said:
You could argue that but you should ask yourself what the purpose of your alert system is and what you are hoping to accomplish. The fact of the matter is that noone plays a different defense to 1♥ showing 4+ hearts than 1♥ showing 5+ hearts. A 1♠ overcall will show spades, a 1NT overcall will probably show a balanced hand with a heart stopper, etc. But if my opponents play a 1♥ opening as showing 4+ spades, as it does in Moscito, then that is something I need to know immediately, because I for one prefer my 1♠ overcall to not show spades in that situation.
So what you accomplish by making 1♥ showing 5 alertable is that whenever I hold a hand suitable for bidding 1♠ over a 1♥ opening showing spades, I need to ask right away what 1♥ meant, then pass in the 99% of cases where it was alerted simply because it showed 5.
On the other hand, what have you gained? Nothing, really. For judging competitive situations, I might still need to ask, because those playing 4-card majors up-the-line will have a 5-card major much more often when opening 1♥ than those playing 4-card majors with a majors-first style. And for defense, I can ask at the end of the auction, and I might not need to - if the bidding goes 1♠-1NT-2♦ I will know that opener has 5 spades regardless of whether he initially showed 4 or 5 (assuming canapé is alertable).
-- Bertrand Russell
#17
Posted 2015-April-05, 13:41
euclidz, on 2015-April-05, 04:41, said:
http://www.acolatbbo...ay/indibids.php
They may claim some proprietorial interest in the definition of Acol that is not justified. But given that no-one can prove ownership of the term or its definition who can really complain?
The main criticism that I would level at the club is its opaque constitution. The decision-making process about what is or is not Acol, what is or is not permitted (such as psychs), what in fact constitutes a psych, what is alertable and so forth, are all handed down by diktat from a coterie of club officials, with no evidence of consultation of the members, whose opinions they presumably regard as unworthy of consideration.
A friend once related to me a conversation held at a table in an Acol club tourney. He had (successfully) registered to play with a robot. Generally, robots are denied entry in Acol club tourneys, but on this occasion the tourney setter had (in error) not set the flag. My colleague's opponent, who happened to be a regular acol club TD and official, passed a comment at the table on how robots would not normally be allowed. When challenged that this was presumably because the robots do not know/play Acol (which incidentally I think would have been a valid objection), the response was no, it was because the members did not want to play against robots. When asked when the members had actually been polled for an opinion on the matter, the response was .... silence.
Psyche (pron. sahy-kee): The human soul, spirit or mind (derived, personification thereof, beloved of Eros, Greek myth).
Masterminding (pron. mstr-mnding) tr. v. - Any bid made by bridge player with which partner disagrees.
"Gentlemen, when the barrage lifts." 9th battalion, King's own Yorkshire light infantry,
2000 years earlier: "morituri te salutant"
"I will be with you, whatever". Blair to Bush, precursor to invasion of Iraq
#18
Posted 2015-April-05, 13:55
#19
Posted 2015-April-05, 14:00
helene_t, on 2015-April-05, 13:55, said:
Psyche (pron. sahy-kee): The human soul, spirit or mind (derived, personification thereof, beloved of Eros, Greek myth).
Masterminding (pron. mstr-mnding) tr. v. - Any bid made by bridge player with which partner disagrees.
"Gentlemen, when the barrage lifts." 9th battalion, King's own Yorkshire light infantry,
2000 years earlier: "morituri te salutant"
"I will be with you, whatever". Blair to Bush, precursor to invasion of Iraq
#20
Posted 2015-April-05, 15:29
euclidz, on 2015-April-02, 14:45, said:
I think that Acol is not so much a system as it is a state of mind...