jallerton, on 2013-August-13, 15:25, said:
I'm not familiar with Dutch alerting regulations, but in many places the following meanings for 3♦ would be alertable:
(i) natural, showing long diamonds but with a fit for spades;
(ii) natural, showing long diamonds but implying a side suit of hearts;
(iii) natural, but implying a solid diamond suit; or even
(iv) natural, but non-forcing [if forcing is considered normal]
as well as:
(v) various artificial meanings.
It seems to me that East wants to double now because he has worked out that N/S have had a misunderstanding, but that he would have passed in the original auction whether 3♦ had been alerted or not.
I agree with you that East sh/could have asked about the alerted 3
♦ bid, just because I think you should always ask about alerted bids and not assume. However, in this case, I have never encountered anybody who played 3
♦ as anything else but invitational with a fit. Though it is alertable, it is also the normal meaning. Similarly, very few people in The Netherlands would ask after an alerted 2
♣ response to a 1NT opening: It is always some form of Stayman (they are all alertable).
In this case, 3
♦ was alerted and should not have been alerted. This means that East now
knows that North's spade length is unknown to South. Before the correction he
expected North to have spade support (though technically it was possible -but unlikely- that North would have had any of your hands i) through v)).
East already knows that South is supposed to have exactly 5 spades. This is particularly true in The Netherlands where people will not open a Muiderberg with more than 5 spades because they know they will get in trouble with the TD.
The fact that NS are in a 5-x fit, where x is very likely less than 3 is a good reason to want to double 4
♠. It is certainly possible to be unlucky and find out that North holds 6 diamonds as well as 3 spades. Then a doubling East gets to keep his bad score. But it is much more likely that North has fewer than 3 spades. East is entitled to an "educated gamble", playing the odds that NS don't have a good spade fit.
________
A completely different issue is whether East is allowed to use the information that NS have a misunderstanding. The Laws are pretty clear about this: Everything that the opponents say (including the initial alert of 3
♦) is AI to East and he can make any decision he wishes, as long as his original decision to pass was influenced by the irregularity. (It was: He had a very good reason to assume there was a fit, now he has a very good reason to assume that there is no fit.)
Note that this is very different from the case where the TD assigns an artificial score: There the TD is supposed to assume that the irregularity did not occur (i.e. that 3
♦ was never alerted to begin with). In that case the TD doesnot see any reason to consider a double by East.
But we are not dealing with an assigned score here. East is making his own decisions.
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.
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