barmar, on 2020-August-26, 18:23, said:
So should we alert every time someone doesn't double an artificial bid (assuming the double would be lead directing of that suit)? This means we should alert all the passes over Stayman and transfers.
And what about passing over an opening 1NT, do we have to alert and explain that they don't have a single-suiter or 2-suiter, if you're playing NT defenses that show them?
This seems like madness to me.
There is, of course, a difference between (1NT)-Pass-(2
♣)-Pass/Dbl and (1NT)-Pass-(3NT)-Pass/Dbl.
In the Stayman auction double/pass says something about a lead of the suit bid. A double there is a natural call (more natural than a takeout double). I do not see why a double of a Stayman bid would need to be alerted if it says "I like clubs".
In the 3NT auction dbl/pass says something about an arbitrary suit that is a specific partnership agreement. When Dbl asks for a spade lead, this is a convention and there is nothing natural about it. There is no doubt in my mind that this double needs to be alerted.
The remaining question is whether the negative inference of not doubling, but passing needs to be alerted. If the double would not be alertable (as after Stayman), then obviously the pass isn't either. Id the double would be alertable, then the pass could be alertable too.
The question whether to alert the pass is a matter of the philosophie of your jurisdiction. It is essentially the same as in 1
♣-(Pass)-1
♥-(1
♠)-Pass when playing support doubles. If this pass is alertable in your jurisdiction (because it denies 3 hearts) then the pass of 1NT-Pass-3NT-Pass, should also be alertable. If the "support double pass" is not alertable in your jurisdiction, then pass in the 3NT case should not be alerted either.
My own opinion is that negative inferences should also be alerted, certainly when playing with screens or when self-alerting online.
Rik
I want my opponents to leave my table with a smile on their face and without matchpoints on their score card - in that order.
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the new discoveries, is not “Eureka!” (I found it!), but “That’s funny…” – Isaac Asimov
The only reason God did not put "Thou shalt mind thine own business" in the Ten Commandments was that He thought that it was too obvious to need stating. - Kenberg
Barmar seems correct that full-disclosure is an ideal to which we aspire but which we rarely attain.
Barmar's example is excellent. At favourable vulnerability, some pairs "disturb" a 1NT opener by an opponent, far more often than they pass. But that shouldn't relieve partner of the obligation to alert defensive calls. Their rare pass is heavily loaded with negative inferences, depending on their agreed conventional defences.
Admittedly, Alerting is clumsy and time-consuming. Announcing would be better.