blackshoe, on 2016-April-19, 06:08, said:
People complain about rules changing too often even when the changes are twenty years apart.
The way to ask is 'please explain your auction'.
Seems too vague to me. Playing as I do, in the "non-Walsh" style, if asked to explain 1
♣-1
♦-1NT-all pass, it could be tempting, if in a mood, to say 1
♣ shows clubs, 1
♦ shows diamonds, 1NT shows a balanced minimum, passing 1NT shows a hope I can make 1NT. Tempting, but I don't give in to temptation. I understand what they are getting at. This comes up often. A question is posed in great generality but I can usually grasp the point of it and I explain. Here I say that the 1
♦ bid does not at all deny a four card major and while it is not strictly forbidden for me to rebid 1NT holding a major I would very rarely do so since we have no agreements for then uncovering any 4-4 major suit fit that we might have. This is really what they are asking about so I tell them. I might just forget about the rare exception since I can't recall the last time I, as opener, skipped over a four card major to rebid 1NT unless we have the Walsh style agreement.
As I see it: After 1
♣-1
♦-1NT-all pass it is reasonable to expect defenders to know that the bid of a suit, diamonds, shows that suit, less reasonable to expect defenders to know that, combined with the pass of 1NT, it also denies two other suits, the majors.
Anyway, the question was whether or not it is alertable and I see that the answer is that it isn't. I can live with that.Generally when I have played Walsh I do not alert, as S, the 1
♦ but I do, as N, alert the 1NT rebid explaining, if asked, that he could easily have four cards in one or both majors and bid this way, I will stop alerting it.