Cyberyeti, on 2012-November-10, 09:46, said:
I think you're missing the point. I very much doubt the 3♥ bidder has 3 hearts and nothing due to the vulnerability, you can easily be going for 1100 against a slam or 500/800 against a game. Given that partner figures to have some values, the chance of bidding game being right materially improves therefore it is demonstrably suggested.
Actually, I was
making a point. See below.
c_corgi, on 2012-November-10, 09:50, said:
His extension of your preempt (the AI) does suggest you pass. I do not see any way in which the UI supports the decision to pass, but as others have pointed out, it is very clear why it makes bidding again more attractive.
I think you're confused about what I'm trying to do here. See below.
ArtK78, on 2012-November-10, 10:30, said:
I guess I would approach this question in a much more simple manner.
Had the 2♥ bidder not heard the explanation given to the opponents, what were his logical alternatives? Clearly they are pass and 4♥. Having said that, does the information provided to the opponents (the UI) demonstrably suggest one of those alternatives over the other?
To answer this last question, one needs to determine what the raise of an intermediate 2 bid shows and what the range of the intermediate 2 bid is. I believe that we all have a pretty good idea of what types of hands partner might have for a raise of a weak 2 bid in this situation, so the question becomes what are the differences between the two raises and what is expected of the 2 bidder.
In my experience, the 2 bidder has a clear pass regardless, but I would like to hear the possibilities nonetheless.
So would I.
lalldonn, on 2012-November-10, 10:43, said:
Blackshoe you know your rulings like almost no one I have ever met. But you are being too creative on this one.
Forget the laws for a moment (which to me clearly support adjusting back to 3♥ anyway) and think about this reasoning. No one would bid game if they had the hand partner expects. Therefore if they bid game after receiving UI you can be 100% sure they are taking advantage of the UI. How can you allow someone to gain by taking advantage of UI?
I can make it even simpler. Why do you think the player at the table bid 4♥?
He had an attack of what David Burn calls "unauthorized panic". But I was not saying that I would not, in the end, adjust the score. I am more concerned here with the journey than I am the destination. I do agree with your reasoning - you have simply and concisely demonstrated why bidding game could be suggested by the UI. What I have been trying to get people to see here is that even if the suggestion is obvious
to them it is not correct to rule "use of UI" (Law 16) or "failure to avoid taking advantage of UI" (Law 73) without showing how you get there. If you aren't sure you can demonstrate how the UI suggests the deprecated action, you may find when someone questions your ruling that your intuition was wrong. Then, after you wipe the egg off your face, you have to amend your ruling.
Better, IMO, to get it right in the first place.
campboy, on 2012-November-10, 11:45, said:
I think this is wrong, partly because I don't think there is a hand which will bid 3♥ opposite a wjo but pass opposite an ijo, and partly because that doesn't matter. The UI takes bidding game from "obviously wrong, partner would have bid game himself if we should be in it" to "possibly right -- partner might want to be in game if he knew I was intermediate rather than weak".
This is another good example of demonstrating how the UI could suggest bidding on.