Whole lotta answers allatonce.
strong 1c, on 2026-March-06, 14:28, said:
It was an on-line game, so no observable flinch....I really appreciate the education and I can see how the 5D bid is/could be a cue bid for some partnerships...just it truly is undefined [] at this time.
Online, on BBO? Then how do you know anything about partner's (lack of) Alerts? How does partner know you took 3
♦ as hearts?
If another platform with partner-Alerts, okay. Not terribly relevant, of course.
StevenG, on 2026-March-07, 02:53, said:
East has the UI that his double wasn't alerted.
And how exactly does that affect the guess that "partner forgot" over "partner has a 25 count and is looking for 6
♥"? For the UI to be relevant, it has to "show" that partner woke up to their misbid/realized East misunderstood their 3
♦ bid(*) somehow.
We've been assuming FtF, partner-Alert all the way through, so let's assume it for this, too.
Having said all that, this comes under the heading of "very unlikely that partner forgot the meaning". This auction comes up once a session on average; as I frequently say, "when you play Precision, you have to learn 3 systems: "when you don't open 1
♣", "when you open 1
♣ and the opponents pass", and "when you open 1
♣ and the opponents don't pass". I would expect that "too busy working out what to do with the information and forgot to Alert" more likely than "didn't know it was Alertable" (but they definitely *should* know it is Alertable, see below) more likely than "forgot the system". Just like the people who "forgot to Announce their partner's transfer - again", neh?
(*) Here, we "know" that it's "partner misbid and got woken up". But from a ruling perspective, it's the same no matter which side of the table forgot the system.
strong 1c, on 2026-March-07, 05:31, said:
Well, I am weak on the rules for sure, but I would think that double is not alertable as I think most doubles and cuebids are implicitly alerted by their very nature. Would a pass showing 0-4 be alerted ?
From the Alert Procedure:
- Doubles. Do Not Alert: After a 1-level suit Opening Bid and a Natural suit overcall, a Negative Double by Responder. [mycroft: "card-showing" is not "Negative", so yes, Alert. Also note that if the interference is not Natural, then no meaning for Double should be Alerted.]
- Passes. Alert: A pass that is Forcing when the hand passing has not previously shown any strength, unless the partner of the passing hand has shown a Very Strong hand. [mycroft: Precision 1♣ is Strong, but not Very Strong. So, if the auction can go 1♣-(1♠)-AP, even if partner could have a trap pass, then I guess it's not Alertable. I do anyway; I expect the pass comes under the heading of "Not Forcing, but never passed, for bridge values of 'never'."]
Most of the Pass/X/XX Alertable decisions are on the first round; it is worth reading rather than "trusting your instinct" any first-round non-bid actions that are unusual.
jillybean, on 2026-March-07, 07:33, said:
What prompted you to ask the question in the opening post?
Assuming OP has woken up partner to his misbid (so, FtF or partner-Alert), OP would like to understand what their partnership's ethical considerations are, so that they can not only follow the Law, but be shown to be proactive in following the Law. This is a good thing - especially when playing an unusual system in an environment occasionally hostile to it (witness history from OP of "[pairs at our club] hate 'all the Alerts'"). OP has caught blowback for "so, how did you figure out to pass a slam-try?", in my eyes unfairly with the information given - but has learned that there's something for OP to think about as well (in re: UI that might only have been realized unconsciously; learning to pay attention to it will make it more consciously obvious in future, which will help with the "be proactive in following the Law".)
StevenG, on 2026-March-07, 08:23, said:
My understanding is that, having been woken up, Peter is constrained to follow a system where his 3♦ bid is natural. In which case I don't see that passing 4♥ is an LA, and I think that 5♦ is an ethical bid, even if it was made for the wrong, i.e. unauthorised panic, reason.
And why do you say that "if 3
♦ was natural, 4
♥ can't be 'choice of games'"? The whole point of the beginning of the thread was "so, what systemically would 4
♥ mean if 3
♦ was diamonds" (or after 3
♣-showing-diamonds)? You can't determine LAs until you decide what the bid should (or could) mean.
Quote
I suspect I might get shot down in flames here.
Not from here (after all, my investigation agreed with you!) Just pointing out that you're not showing your work (or jumping the gun, or begging the question, depending), and the reasoning for "passing is not an LA to rebidding my 6-card suit, contracting to take 11 tricks with 16-opposite-5/7 and unknown support (and a weak doubleton in 'partner's suit', that's two likely losers right there) as opposed to letting partner try for 10 tricks with a doubleton, when I know from UI that this isn't 'partner's suit'") is in fact the important part of the whole discussion.
So, what do you think 4
♥ would mean in the "3
♦ is natural" auction, and why does that mean that pass is not something "a significant proportion of the class of players in question, using the methods of the partnership, would seriously consider, and some might select" (definition of LA, Law 16B1b)?
Long live the Republic-k. -- Major General J. Golding Frederick (tSCoSI)