campboy, on 2015-May-04, 02:43, said:
Here's what might actually happen at the table, if the agreement is descried accurately. Opponents ask about the bid and are told "we agreed to play Widget, but didn't have any further discussion and this sequence hasn't come up before". Now if opponents are familiar with Widget, they will assume C. If not, they will ask "What is Widget?" It seems clear from OP that any answer which doesn't say "Widget means C in this situation" would be incorrect.
Now opponents must be entitled to ask this supplementary question -- you cannot get around the requirement to disclose agreements by having discussions in terms they don't understand. And if they are entitled to ask, they are entitled to a correct answer. So they must be entitled to meaning C.
as it happened, the widget bid was not alerted and no questions were asked at the time, so your entire premise is wrong, in terms of addressing the OP questions.
I almost despair of explaining, successfully, why those who say that the innocent players are entitled to C are so wrong, but here is one last try.
Forget all the guff about 'widget': it is irrelevant. To show why, let's assume that the widget bid was 2
♥.
In real widget, as devised by its creator and as written up, assume this shows the minors.
(A), the person who bid 2
♥, thinks it shows the blacks.
(B), his partner, thinks it is the only natural bid in the method, and shows hearts.
The auction ends, and for the sake of simplicity, let's assume (A) will declare. He says: there has been a failure to alert my 2
♥ bid......and let's assume further that the TD is right there, no explanations are given at the table, the TD takes first (A) and then (B) away and grills them.
Ok, let's revert to the point of the call...and assume an opp asks (B) what 2
♥ meant. (B)'s obligation is simple. In real life he might say: we agreed to play widget and in widget this is natural, but only the last 3 words are part of the proper answer....telling the opps one plays widget is unneeded....the opps aren't asking: what is the name of that convention? They aren't asking...if you play widget, what does 2
♥ show? They are asking: what agreement do you have about what 2
♥ shows, and at that time, at the time of the 2
♥ bid, the explanation they are entitled to is that 2
♥ is natural. Later, there may be adjustments because that was MI, but that is a different issue.
Go back to the TD being at the table. He didn't ask (or needn't ask) 'what do you guys play here? He isn't interested in the name of the convention. He wants to know: do these guys have an agreement about what 2
♥ showed?
He will very quickly learn that while these guys thought they had agreed on widget, they didn't have a real agreement at all: in short, they did not have ANY agreement as to what 2
♥ showed, and that is the only important question. Forget all of the worriesw about what widget ought to mean, etc. What did they understand from the bid made at the table? And they did not have any agreement as to what that bid meant.
The fact that 6 skilled, experienced widget players would have unanimously agreed that 2
♥ shows the minors is utterly irrelevant.
The opps are not entitled to know how players not at the table would understand 2
♥. What possible relevance could that have to the auction?
The opps are entitled only to KNOW THE AGREED MEANING OF THE BID, AS WITHIN THE PARTNERSHIP THAT MADE THE BID.
As it happened, there was NO agreement within the partnership. One thought it was natural, the other that it showed the blacks. But it is only the partnership understanding that is proper information to the opps, and here the only correct explanation to be given by the TD is: I have determined that the partnership had no agreement as to what 2
♥ meant.
There may still be adjustments, if the failure to alert resulted in (A) gaining UI, from the absence of the expected alert. There might, in some circumstances, be sanctions for failing to know partnership methods, but those issues are beyond the OP issue, which was merely about what information ought be given to the opps.
Put another way: the opps are not entitled to know what widget means. They don't give a damn about what widget means. They care only about what 2
♥ means to their opps....what agreement, if any, do the opps have about the hand that is shown by the 2
♥ bid. They don't care if the opps think they are playing widget, modified widget, brozel, astro, timbuctoo, inverted whatsis, etc. They want to know what the partnership has agreed 2
♥ to mean.
They would only be entitled to know C if they were entitled to ask: what is the published meaning of 2
♥ within the widget convention? Firstly, no bridge player would ever ask that question and secondly the answer is irrelevant unless the opps have agreed to play widget in precisely that fashion, which (in the OP) they hadn't.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari