Posted 2023-February-16, 17:46
1. I will note that I tend to agree with almost everybody in this thread. The OP's description I think needs work for general use (I would not assume that any audience I have about "aggressive preempting" would know what ODR was, never mind assume they can work out qualitatively what their hand is on that scale), but for those of us that do have all the terms, fine.
2. One thing I definitely agree with is Mike's "there's not enough disclosure about preempt style". Unfortunately, at least where we play, the PTB have decided that this is something that is the opponents' job to find out (hopefully through the CC), not something the players should be alerting their opponents to. Part of it is "Natural bidding shouldn't need alerts except in very uncommon situations; yeah, a few more common ones that do need it might slip through the cracks", but I know that part of it is "where do you draw the line?" (with a side line of "Bracket 1 know what to expect from their opponents, so extra talking is a waste of their time; they also think that is normal, so why should we have to explain 'normal bidding' to non-Bracket 1 players?" - with a huge implied chunk of "why should we get punished for 'technical violations' of Alerting that 'everybody [who can play] already knows' in the Stratified side game with my client?" and I'm quite sure some "frankly, if the opponents don't expect it, that's an advantage I will take. They should know how to 'play bridge'.")
It boils down to "the stuff I play is 'just good bridge', and shouldn't have to be explained at the table (or not be legal). The stuff they play is 'there simply isn’t time for even quite experienced players to decide upon a strategy' [if pre-Alerted, which, to be clear, is explicitly not required]. Whether it's "third seat white, our 3♥ call is likely QTxxxx" or "in third seat, our 1M openers could be KQxxx and out" vs "third seat white, our 2♥ call could easily be JTxx" or "in third seat, our 1M openers could be a JTxx 2 count" - both would get the same gasps from my club players [note that both sets of agremeents there are both explicitly legal (open chart, ACBL) and neither Alertable nor pre-Alertable (okay, the 4+card weak 2 is Alertable (Quasi-Natural, not Announced)). But the experts went all "how dare you say we have to warn the opponents we're playing the former" (or worse, until last year, "how dare you say we can't open this hand, it's an obvious 1♠ call!") - and a bunch of the same would hit the ballroom roof if the opponents played the latter - "we need hours/days to come up with a strategy over this clearly destructive call!"
And yes, I know whereof I speak, from years of playing 1NT for takeout, EHAA 2 bids - even with the Pre-Alert and Alert, back in the day when that was required - or even a Precision 1♥, whether or not it was "NV, 9s that look like 10s-15" or a more common agreement.
"We don't have enough time to prepare against X" is the expert's "we want to play our 'useful system', we just don't want to have to play against their 'crazy bids'." Sorry, you should have agreements against ultra-aggressive preempts, just the same way you have agreements against 8+ 1M openers in a Precision context, or Flannery, or 10-13 2M bids. Frankly, it will be a lot more common (okay, except for Flannery).
Should the disclosure requirements be clearer, and probably more detailed, around preempts? 100% yes. But not just "preempts we don't think are good".
Ask a C pair what their preempt style is, and they look at you as if you're speaking Greek. Maybe you'll get a "well, it will be 2/top 3 or 3/top 5 of course, and 6 cards, [but why ask that?]"
Ask a "real A", but not expert, and you'll get "normal". WTH does that mean? And is that any more fair than one pair of my acquaintance's "First two seats, basically disciplined. In third seat, 'she has some hearts and some points" (I wouldn't expect Jxxx, but I would expect both AKJxxx and a card and JTxxx and a card). Or is it just that the experts know what those quotes mean?
3. There's a reason I don't play EHAA in a team game - unless the other pair both know we play that and want us to (or if they're also playing EHAA!) There's a limit to the variance I want to bring in preempts at IMPs, or when there are 5, not just 3 opponents (LHO, RHO, CHO, and OTOs?) But at matchpoints, "if you've never gone for 800, you shouldn't be playing DONT" applies.
4. Having said that, my most common partnership's preempt style is "very wide-ranging (but normal length), sounder vul and/or 2nd." First seat favourable, Jxxxxx is close to a minimum [Edit: for a weak 2]. Third seat, could be very weak, could be a garbage opener, could be anything in between - and yes, that costs when partner has to figure out what to do against 4♠ later. Does that come under the heading of "experts need to have half an hour to work out agreements against"? Is "not Alerting anything (except the third seat preempts that "could contain 12 HCP"), not pre-Alerting, explaining our style when asked (or when declaring, or when explaining Ogust rebids)" sufficient disclosure? Should it be? Because we're not the only ones. The problem is that I'm not said Bracket 1 pro, so I don't know - all I can do is "follow the explicit rules in the charts".
Mike, I come down more than a little hard on you here, and you don't deserve it. I'm sorry. As I said, I agree with you in general, but explicitly the people that created the Alert Procedure say we're wrong. They're very clear on it in fact. Plus, while I'm sure your disclosure is impeccable (no sarcasm), you're catching a bit of the people who (think they) are at your level, who play Blue Club and whose pre-Alert at the time was "some of our bids are canapé", but who made it very clear that good players would need "more time than at the table to come up with a defence to 1NT as a takeout double", with a big side order of "you are very aware of that, and you play it just to take advantage". Or maybe the "we've played bridge together for 1500 masterpoints, but we have 'no agreement' about many auctions" pair (because they deliberately did not have an explicit discussion about it). As I said, I'm sorry.
When I go to sea, don't fear for me, Fear For The Storm -- Birdie and the Swansong (tSCoSI)