Waded through old e-mails for the two rulings on Reverses. Relevant portions pasted below:
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My partner and I play Standard American but do not play reverses. We've run into the occasional person who insists that reverses are a required part of the system. I've read ACBL's own description of the system as "nebulous".
The Alert Chart appears to be silent on the subject. I believe we're in the right, but want a definitive answer that I can refer to.
Do we need to Pre-Alert or Alert the fact that we do not play reverses?
RE: Reverses
Rulings <Rulings@acbl.org>
Tue 2018-07-03 11:04 AM
Playing reverses is a matter of partnership agreement. Law has nothing to do with that choice. It is between you and your partner. Even if others insist that “you have to,” it is your system, and it is your choice.
The part where the law does come in is keeping the opponents informed. Because you are not playing reverses, sequences that sound like reverses (to others) could be much weaker than they might expect. Yours is a natural treatment. Alert Procedures (
http://web2.acbl.org...tProcedures.pdf) says:
“Treatments that show unusual strength or shape should be Alerted.”
The phrase, “unusual strength,” includes hands that are stronger or weaker than would normally be expected. When one of these bids comes up, alert it and if asked, explain that it is not a reverse and does not show any extra values. This is not a huge variation from Standard American, so there is no need to pre-alert.
Regards,
Tom Ciacio
Tournament Director and Rulings Box Associate
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Third Question
Is it okay to Pre-Alert a procedure that doesn't fall under the normal Pre-Alert requirements?
I recently asked about the need to alert the fact that we don't play reverses - the ruling was that it wasn't unusual enough to require a Pre-Alert but did require an Alert when a bid looks like a reverse. My partner has trouble understanding what bids are reverses and I tend to forget about them while bidding because I don't play them - blame a previous partner who was addicted to using them. Pre-Alerting our lack of reverses would prevent problems and avoid the appearance of UI from our inconsistency in remembering to Alert.
Re: Three Alert questions
Rulings <Rulings@acbl.org>
Tue 2018-08-21 12:20 AM
3. Your intentions are good, but you should not Pre-Alert an understanding that does not require a Pre-Alert. (Though this would not be your intent, in other situations this could "remind" the partner of a Pre-Alerter what their agreement is, which would be Unauthorized Information). Simply alerting your partner's bid when she makes what to most would look like a reverse is sufficient. If your partner does not Alert your non-reverse call, do call the Director at the end of the auction if you are the declaring side, or at the end of the play of the hand if you are defending so the Director can make an adjustment to the result if your opponents were harmed by the failure to Alert.
Lynn Yokel
Tournament Director and Rulings Box Associate
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So, extra strength is considered standard, rulings were moot on distribution requirements.