INTRODUCTION
The objective of the Alert system is for both pairs at
the table to have equal access to all information contained in any
auction. In order to meet this goal, it is necessary that all
players understand and practice the principles of Full Disclosure
and Active Ethics. Ethical bridge players will recognize the
obligation to give complete explanations. They will accept the fact
that any such information is entirely for the benefit of the
opponents, and may not be used to assist their own partnership.
This procedure uses the admittedly "fuzzy"
terminology of "highly unusual and unexpected" as the best practical
solution to simplifying the Alert Procedure. "Highly unusual and
unexpected" should be determined in light of historical usage rather
than local geographical usage. To ensure full disclosure, however,
at the end of the auction and before the opening lead declarers are
encouraged to volunteer to explain the auction (including available
inferences).
According to the Laws of Duplicate Contract
Bridge: Law 40.B. Concealed Partnership Understandings Prohibited
A player may not make a call or play based on a special
partnership understanding unless an opposing pair may reasonably
be expected to understand its meaning, or unless his side
discloses the use of such call or play in accordance with the
regulations of the sponsoring organization.
Bridge is not a game of secret messages; the
auction belongs to everyone at the table.
The bidding side has an obligation to disclose
its agreements according to the procedures established by ACBL.
When asked, the bidding side must give
a full explanation of the agreement. Stating the common or
popular name of the convention is not sufficient.
The opponents need not ask exactly the "right"
question.
Any request for information should be the
trigger. Opponents need only indicate the desire for information
- all relevant disclosure should be given automatically.
The proper way to ask for information is "please
explain."
Players who remember that a call requires
an Alert but cannot remember the meaning must still Alert.
In all Alert situations, Tournament Directors
should rule with the spirit of the Alert procedure in mind and not
simply by the letter of the law.
Players who, by experience or expertise,
recognize that their opponents have neglected to Alert a special
agreement will be expected to protect themselves.
Adjustments for violations are not automatic.
There must have been misinformation.
An adjustment will be made only when the
misinformation was a direct cause of the damage.
Note also that an opponent who actually
knows or suspects what is happening, even though not properly
informed, may not be entitled to redress if he or she chooses
to proceed without clarifying the situation.
When an Alert is given, ASK, do not ASSUME.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
An announcement is one word or a short phrase
which tells the opponents directly the meaning of partner's call.
When bidding boxes are used, the "Alert" strip is tapped also.
Announcements are required in the following instances:
1. After a natural one notrump opening bid.
EXAMPLE: A 15-17 1NT opening bid is made. The partner of the
bidder will say aloud, "fifteen to seventeen."
4. After a non-forcing opening 1 or 1
for which the opener could have fewer than three cards in the suit
opened.
After the opening bid, the opening bidder's partner says, "May be
short."
HOW TO ALERT
Using spoken bidding, the partner of the player making an Alertable
call says "Alert."
Using bidding boxes, an Alert is made by tapping an Alert card on
the table or by tapping the Alert strip on the side of the bid box.
In addition, the Alerter must say "Alert."
Using screens, ALL Alerts are immediate - there are no delayed
Alerts. All Announcements become Alerts.
HOW TO ANNOUNCE
When Bid Boxes are not in use, the partner says aloud the required
spoken statement.
When Bid Boxes are being used, the Alert strip is tapped and the
appropriate spoken statement is made.
IT IS THE RESPONSIBILITY OF THE ALERTER OR ANNOUNCER TO ENSURE
THAT THE OPPONENTS ARE AWARE THAT AN ALERT HAS BEEN MADE.
WHEN IN DOUBT WHETHER TO ALERT OR NOT, ALERT!
FAILURE TO ALERT OR ANNOUNCE
If partner fails to Alert or Announce, a player
may not make any indication during the auction. Showing surprise or
discomfort may awaken partner to the error and would be a violation
of Law. In addition, a player may not make allowances for partner's
error. The auction must continue as if partner had acted properly.
When the auction is over, the declaring
side MUST reveal to the defenders, after first calling the
Tournament Director, any errors of explanation (including Alerts or
Announcements that were omitted) before the opening lead is faced. A
defender MUST reveal any of his partner's errors but
may NOT do so until after the play has been completed. A
defender (or any other player) who becomes aware of his own
error or omission should correct it immediately.
Again, in either case the Tournament Director should be called
first.
TYPES OF ALERTS
Pre-Alerts
Pre-Alerts are given before the auction period
begins on the first board of a round. Pre-Alerts are designed to
act as an early warning of any unusual methods for which the
opponents may need to prepare. (See Part III.) Additionally, a
pre-Alert is required when playing methods permitted by the ACBL
Mid-Chart or SuperChart in an event conducted using that chart.
Pre-Alerts are given aloud by saying what the systems or methods
are.
Immediate Alerts
Immediate Alerts are given at the time partner
makes a call which requires an Alert. These Alerts are given in
the form described under How to Alert above.
Delayed Alerts
Alerts given after the auction is completed for
Alertable calls above the level of 3NT starting with the opening
bidder's second turn to call. The dummy or declarer Alerts the
defenders before the opening lead. The defenders Alert after the
opening lead has been made but before it is faced. (See Part X.)
PART I: NATURAL CALLS
Most natural calls do not require Alerts. If the call promises
about the expected strength and shape, no Alert is necessary.
Treatments that show unusual strength or shape should be Alerted.
As to length, ACBL accepts as NATURAL any offer to
play in a suit for the first time that shows:
(1)Three or more cards in a minor suit.
(2) Four or more cards in a major suit.
(3) Four or more cards for an overcall in a suit at the one level.
(4) Five or more cards for a weak two-bid.
(5) Six or more cards for a three-level preempt.
NOTE: Partnerships whose systems include extremely aggressive
methods, such as frequent use of four-card overcalls at the two
level or higher, weak two-bids with bad five-card suits, or
three-level preempts with bad six-card and/or most five-card suits
must pre-Alert the opponents before the round begins.
A treatment is a natural call that carries a
specific message about the suit bid or the general strength of the
hand. Agreeing to open five-card majors is a treatment - when you
open 1 , partner "knows" you have five or more. This
is indeed a message but not an unexpected one, so no Alert is
required. Weak jump shifts, on the other hand, are unexpected and
therefore Alertable.
EXAMPLE: 1 -P-2
If the 2 bid promises a spade suit of five or
more cards, it is a natural call. The treatment involves the
strength that the bid promises. If the call is forcing to game, no
Alert is required. If it is weak or invitational, then it must be
Alerted.
Natural bids that convey an unexpected meaning
must be Alerted. This includes strong bids that sound weak, weak
bids that sound strong, and all other bids that, by agreement,
convey meanings different from, or in addition to, the expected
meaning ascribed to them.
EXAMPLE: 1 -P-2
If 2 is natural and forcing, promising three
or more clubs and 10 or more HCP (including those that are forcing
to game), it requires no Alert. This is the expected strength and
shape of such a bid. If 2 is non-forcing, it must
be Alerted.
In general, when the use of conventions leads to
unexpected understandings about suit length by negative inference, a
natural call becomes Alertable. Some such agreements have become
expected and are fairly common, therefore no Alert is required.
EXAMPLES: 1 -P-1
PART II: CONVENTIONS
A convention is defined as any call which, by
partnership agreement, conveys a meaning not necessarily related to
the denomination named or, in the case of a pass, double or
redouble, the last denomination named.
Examples of calls deemed to be conventional are:
showing support for a previously bid suit and shortness in the bid
suit (such as a splinter bid) and bidding your worst suit for
takeout.
ALMOST ALL CONVENTIONS MUST BE ALERTED.
In general, conventional calls require an Alert.
In ACBL-sponsored events, however, there are some common conventions
that do not require an Alert during the auction: Stayman, ace-asking
bids, most meanings of cue-bids, strong artificial 2
openings and most doubles, redoubles and passes. Some Alerts are
delayed until the auction is completed. (SEE PART X: DELAYED
ALERTS.)
1) STAYMAN
No Alert is required for any bid of 2
over partner's 1NT opening or 3 over a 2NT opening
if it requests opener to bid a four-card major, regardless of
whether the Stayman bidder promises a four-card major. Likewise, a 2
response to Stayman (or a 3 response after 2NT-P-3
) is not Alterable if it denies a four-card major.
EXAMPLE: 1NT-P-2 and 2NT-P-3
Partnerships do not need to Alert their Stayman bids in order to
differentiate between those that promise a four-card major and those
that don't. Opponents may assume that an immediate bid of clubs over
a natural notrump opening is conventional, asking opener to bid a
four-card major, with no guarantee that responder has a four-card
major suit.
However, when it becomes evident that the
two-club bidder either does not have or tends not to have a
four-card major, an Alert is required at that time.
EXAMPLE: 1NT - P - 2 - P - 2(x)
- P - 2NT If the 2NT is or is most likely a raise in notrump without
a four-card major, an Alert is required at the time of the 2NT bid.
NOTE: A 2NT rebid after a response to a strong 2
opening is deemed to be a strong notrump opening for the purposes of
this regulation, as is a 1NT or 2NT rebid after a strong, artificial
1 opening and response.
EXAMPLE: 2 -P-2 -P- 2NT-P-3
Alerts are still necessary when the bid is not
obviously asking for a major, such as a "checkback" auction where
the club bid may be mistaken for one showing a club holding.
EXAMPLE: 1 -P-1 -P- 1NT-P-2
If the 2 call is artificial such as asking
partner to show a four-card major, it requires an Alert.
2) STRONG, ARTIFICIAL TWO CLUBS
Forcing 2 opening bids, either
natural or artificial, do not require an Alert. Intermediate 2
openings, such as those used in Precision systems, must be Alerted.
After a strong, artificial 2
opening, an artificial 2 response which is either
negative or waiting is not Alertable. Those who play a
"semi-automatic" 2 bid do not need to Alert. If 2
guarantees the values for game, or has any meaning other than
negative or waiting, it must be Alerted.
3) ACE ASKING BIDS
4NT Blackwood (any variety over suits) and 4
Gerber (any variety over notrump) and expected responses thereto
do not require an Alert of any kind. All other ace-asking bids and
responses require an Alert, but some of these Alerts must be
"delayed."
Ace-asking bids at the level of 3NT or below
and usages on the first round (other than Blackwood and Gerber as
described above), require an immediate Alert. Unusual
ace-asking bids above the level of 3NT starting with opener's
second turn to call require a delayed Alert.
EXAMPLES: 1 -P-4 -P-
4
If you have agreed to play 4 as
an ace-asking bid, make a delayed Alert! Furthermore, the responses
to 4 and to subsequent asking bids require a
delayed Alert.
1 -P-4
If this is Gerber, the 1 opener
should say "Alert" immediately after the 4 bid.
1 -P-4NT
If this 4NT is Blackwood, no Alert or delayed
Alert is required.
Normal responses to any variety Blackwood do not
require an Alert.
REMEMBER! THE DEFENDERS ALSO HAVE THE
RESPONSIBILITY TO MAKE DELAYED ALERTS.
4) CUEBIDS
Most cuebids are not Alertable. However, any
cuebid which conveys a very unusual or unexpected meaning still
requires an Alert.
PART III: PRE-ALERTS
Pre-Alerts are designed to act as an early
warning system of any unusual methods for which the opponents may
need to prepare. Pre-Alerts must be given before the auction period
begins on the first board of a round or match.
1) "TWO-SYSTEM" METHODS
Some pairs vary their system by position, by
vulnerability, or a combination of the two. While this is legal, it
is also something the opponents may need to know ahead of time. One
example of this is agreeing to play a forcing-club system not
vulnerable and "two over one" vulnerable.
Minor variations such as varying notrump range or
jump overcall strength by vulnerability do not require a pre-Alert.
These methods still require normal Announcements (notrump ranges;
transfers) or Alerts (forcing Stayman over some notrump ranges) when
appropriate.
As an aside, please note that it is not legal
to vary your system during a session for subjective reasons, such as
the skill level of the opponents which you happen to be playing at
the time or which member of the partnership is making the call. You
may, of course, alter your defenses in response to the opponents'
methods.
2) SYSTEMS BASED ON VERY LIGHT OPENINGS OR
OTHER HIGHLY AGGRESSIVE METHODS
If it is your partnership style to routinely open
hands with fewer than 11 HCP, preempt with very weak (frequently
worse than Qxxxxx) suits, and/or overcalls with fewer than 6 HCP at
the one level, the opponents must be pre-Alerted.
3) SYSTEMS THAT MAY BE FUNDAMENTALLY
UNFAMILIAR TO THE OPPONENTS
Players are expected to be prepared for the vast
majority of systems that they may encounter at the bridge table.
Common methods include either strong or weak notrumps with or
without five-card majors. The forcing opening bid will most often be
an artificial forcing opening of 1 or 2
.
When you play a system structured along different
agreements than these, you should draw the opponents attention to
your convention card before the round begins. In short, if you play
a system that most players would not immediately recognize (such as
a canapé system) or one the opponents may wish to discuss before the
auction begins (a 10-12 1NT range with distributional requirements
for minor-suit openings, for example), you are required to pre-Alert
the opponents.
PART IV: DOUBLES, REDOUBLES AND PASSES
Except for those doubles with highly unusual or unexpected
meanings, doubles do not require an Alert.
Passes or redoubles with highly unusual or
unexpected meanings require an Alert.
PART V: NOTRUMP OPENINGS, RESPONSES AND REBIDS
Conventional notrump openings and overcalls
require an Alert.
Systemically unbalanced or conventional 1NT
openings or overcalls by an unpassed hand, when permitted, and
openings at the two level or higher with an unusual range or
conventional meaning require an Alert.
Natural 1NT opening bids require an
Announcement.
EXAMPLE: 1NT (showing 12-14 HCP)
Partner says immediately, "twelve to fourteen."
or
EXAMPLE: 1NT (showing 15-17 HCP)
Partner says immediately, "fifteen to seventeen."
EXAMPLE: 1NT (showing 14 HCP with a five-card
suit to 17- without a five-card suit)
Partner says immediately, "fourteen plus to seventeen minus."
Natural 1NT overcalls in the range of 14 to 19 HCP require
neither an Alert nor an Announcement. If the top or bottom limit of
the natural notrump overcall is out of that range or conventional by
an unpassed hand, an Alert is required.
RESPONSES TO ONE NOTRUMP OPENINGS
1) 2 : If it requires partner to
bid a four-card major it is not Alertable; all other uses must be
Alerted.
2) 2 : If natural and non-invitational, it is not
Alertable. A transfer to hearts is Announced. All other uses must be
Alerted.
3) 2 : If natural and non-invitational, it is not
Alertable. A transfer to spades is Announced. All other uses must be
Alerted.
4) 2 : If natural and non-invitational, it is not
Alertable. All other uses must be Alerted.
5) 2NT: If invitational to 3NT, it is not Alertable. All other uses
must be Alerted.
6) 3 , , , :
If natural, they are not Alertable. All other uses must be Alerted,
or…
7) 3 , and 4 , :
If transfers to hearts and spades, respectively, must be Announced.
PART VI: OPENING SUIT BIDS, RESPONSES AND
REBIDS
1) 1 : Not Alertable if natural (three or more cards
in minor) and non-forcing. Announceable if fewer than three cards is
the only unnatural meaning. Any other meaning must be Alerted (e.g.,
a Precision opening 1 ).
2) 1 : Not Alertable if natural (three or more cards
in minor) and non-forcing. Announceable if fewer than three cards is
the only unnatural meaning. Any other meaning must be Alerted.
3) 1 ,1 : Not Alertable if natural
(four or more cards in major) and non-forcing. (Note that canapé
systems must be pre-Alerted and canapé bids must also be Alerted
during the auction.) All other meanings are Alertable.
4) 2 : Not Alertable if strong and forcing, whether
natural or artificial. All other meanings are Alertable (e.g.,
natural and weak or intermediate).
5) 2 ,2 ,2 : Weak,
natural, non-conventional uses do not require an Alert. All other
natural or conventional meanings are Alertable.
RESPONSES TO SUIT BIDS
1 -P-1 :
Not Alertable if natural, forcing one round, and does not deny
a four- (or five)-card major. All other uses must be Alerted.
1 -P-1 or 1 -P-1 :
Not Alertable if it shows four or more cards in the suit bid
and is forcing for one round. Note that the fact that you might
bypass a longer diamond suit is NOT Alertable.
1 -P-1NT or 1 -P-1NT:
Not Alertable if it shows a limited (maximum 11 HCP), balanced
hand.
1 -P-1 or 1 -P-1 :
1 -P-1 :
1 -P-1NT:
Not Alertable if natural and non-forcing. Announceable
if it is forcing or semi-forcing. Alert if it: 1) promises spades
or 2) has some other conventional meaning.
(Note: Semi-forcing in this case means that opener may pass with a
minimum and 5-3-3-2 distribution but otherwise will treat it as a
forcing notrump. Passed-hand 1NT responses, unless they cannot be
passed, do not require an Announcement.
1 -P-1NT:
Not Alertable if natural and non-forcing. Announceable if it is
forcing or semi-forcing. Other conventional agreements require an
Alert.
2 -P-2 OR a 2NT response to a
natural, strong two bid:
2 , , -P-2NT:
Not Alertable if it asks for further clarification. Natural,
non-forcing 2NT responses to opening two bids must be Alerted.
NOTE: A non-forcing suit response to a weak two-bid requires an
Alert.
A simple raise (2 -P-3 , for
example) of a weak two-bid that is invitational or better requires
an Alert.
Game-forcing natural jump shifts are not
Alertable. Other jump shifts (either conventional or natural and
weak or intermediate) not in competition must be Alerted. A natural
jump shift in competition does not require an Alert regardless of
strength.
A natural 2NT response which is invitational or
better does not require an Alert.
Two-over-one bids are not Alertable if they are
natural and forcing for at least one round. Note that natural
two-over-one game-forcing bids are not Alertable.
In general, responses by a passed hand are
considered non-forcing and do not require an Alert or Announcement.
OPENER'S REBIDS
A 1NT rebid if strong (may have 16 or more HCP)
requires an Alert.
A rebid in a suit that tends to be longer than
the opening bid suit (canapé) requires an Alert.
Opener's rebid of two of a minor over partner's
forcing or semi-forcing notrump response to a major does not require
an Alert if it shows three or more of the suit bid (4-5-2-2 does not
require an Alert as long as responder expects three or more cards in
the minor).
PART VII: HIGH-LEVEL OPENING BIDS
3 ,3 ,3 ,3 :
Natural and preemptive (weak) opening suit bids at the three
level are not Alertable. If you commonly preempt at this level
with very weak suits (worse than Qxxxxx) or suits of fewer than
six cards you must pre-Alert your methods. Intermediate, strong or
conventional usage must be Alerted.
3NT: A 3NT opening that promises a strong,
balanced hand is not Alertable. Gambling 3NT openings and all other
conventional uses must be Alerted.
Natural opening bids at the three level or higher
which convey an unusual message regarding HCP range or any other
information which might be unexpected to the opponents must be
Alerted.
EXAMPLE:
EXAMPLE:
EXAMPLE:
A natural 3 opening which is stronger than
expected since the partnership has agreed to open 2
(a Mid-Chart agreement so the Mid-Chart has to be in effect)
with weak minor-suit preempts.
REMEMBER! Below game, non-forcing natural suit
responses to preemptive openings require an Alert.
PART VIII: OTHER CONSTRUCTIVE CALLS
Natural jump raises in competition are not Alertable regardless
of strength. In the same vein, natural jump shifts in competition do
not require an Alert regardless of strength.
PART IX: DEFENSIVE AND COMPETITIVE CALLS
A jump to 2NT to show the minors or the lower
unbid suits is not Alertable. A bid of 3NT as unusual must be
Alerted. A bid of 4NT is not Alertable as long as the prior bid was
by an opponent. Non-jump unusual notrump bids below 4NT, except
those made by a passed hand, must be Alerted.
Natural jump overcalls that are weak do not
require an Alert. All other natural and conventional meanings are
Alertable. Unusual overcalls, including the tendency to overcall at
the two level frequently with a suit of fewer than five cards or
with less than two-over-one values (approximately 10 HCP), must be
Alerted.
PART X: DELAYED (or POST) ALERTS
ALERTABLE CALLS ABOVE THE LEVEL OF 3NT STARTING WITH OPENER'S
SECOND TURN TO CALL
Once the auction has progressed to the point
that the opening bidder has had the opportunity to make a second
call, conventional calls at the four level or higher are not Alerted
until the auction is over.
These DELAYED ALERTS are REQUIRED to be made by
the DECLARING side before the opening lead. The DEFENDERS are
REQUIRED to Alert declarer AFTER the OPENING LEAD but BEFORE
declarer makes a play from dummy (Alerting before the lead is turned
face-up and the dummy is spread is best).
The declaring side must make their Delayed Alerts
before the opening lead. Defenders wait until they have made the
opening lead before they explain calls requiring a Delayed Alert. As
with normal Alerts, the partner of the person making the Alertable
call is the person who makes the Delayed Alert and explains the
agreement.
UNUSUAL CARDING AGREEMENTS
Except for leading low from a doubleton which
requires a pre-Alert, carding agreements do not require an Alert of
any kind. However, the box on the card in the middle of SPECIAL
CARDING [ ] PLEASE ASK must be checked when playing a completely
unexpected method or one that is not easily or clearly described by
simply checking a box.
DECLARER IS EXPECTED TO EXAMINE AN OPPONENT'S CONVENTION CARD
WITHOUT PROMPTING IN ORDER TO ASCERTAIN THEIR DEFENSIVE METHODS.
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