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Decisions, decisions

#1 User is offline   Edmunte1 

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Posted 2008-October-22, 16:21

Playing in a team match we lost 12 IMP's against 6 making on this board:
Scoring: IMP

1-(3)-3-(4(1))
4-(5)-dbl(2)-all pass
Result: +800

(1) values + fit
(2) pass would have been forcing
Do you agree with North-South decisions? What you dislike most?
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#2 User is offline   Cascade 

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Posted 2008-October-22, 17:38

I dislike the agreement that pass is forcing.

North passing the double with heart support and this much distribution borders on insanity.
Wayne Burrows

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#3 User is offline   jdonn 

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Posted 2008-October-22, 17:41

Cascade, on Oct 22 2008, 06:38 PM, said:

I dislike the agreement that pass is forcing.

North passing the double with heart support and this much distribution borders on insanity.

Disagree with the first part, 3 is probably game forcing in fact so how could pass not be forcing?

Completely agree with the second part, although I fear I may be resulting since north won't know south has a singleton club? I mean if one of south's hearts or diamonds was a club, you are probably getting from 500 to 1100 instead of likely 650 or 680 with a chance to go down.
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#4 User is offline   TimG 

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Posted 2008-October-22, 17:45

How about 4 instead of 4? If partner is faced with a decision over 5 (which seems likely), exposing the heart fit would seem like a good idea even with a self-sufficient suit.
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#5 User is offline   peachy 

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Posted 2008-October-22, 19:03

I would like to know what creates a Forcing Pass situation if a GF does not do it (for Wayne)?
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#6 User is offline   benlessard 

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Posted 2008-October-22, 23:46

Pass if of course forcing. Double is a terrible bid. A of S, stiff clubs and A of diamond is enough to make a FP, so here the K of H is a bonus and if partner bid make any foward move we will bid slam.



1S----(3♣)-----3♥------(4D)
4♠----(5♣)-----Pass-----(P)
5D----(P)-------5NT P-A-S
???

Here I think ill bid 6S since its safer to avoid a ruff at trick 1.


Also the type of namyats / 4S preempt style you are using is a bit important here to know how strong 4S is.
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#7 User is offline   Codo 

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Posted 2008-October-23, 00:47

I hate the 4 Spade bid most.
The double was bad too, but do I really have a hand, where I should look for an own slam opposite a partner who bid 1 4 ?
Kind Regards

Roland


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#8 User is offline   P_Marlowe 

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Posted 2008-October-23, 02:00

Hi,

I think the 4S bid is fine, after all we have
a 7 card suit, and partners 3H bid may be
based on a 5 card suit.

Passing 5C is certainly forcing, at least assuming,
that 3H was already game forcing, which is certainly
the standard meaning, so the double is fine.
Passing the double, ... well I am not sure, that
this would be my decision given that I did hide
the heart support, most likely I would have bid
5H.

With kind regards
Marlowe
With kind regards
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
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#9 User is offline   P_Marlowe 

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Posted 2008-October-23, 02:01

peachy, on Oct 22 2008, 08:03 PM, said:

I would like to know what creates a Forcing Pass situation if a GF does not do it (for Wayne)?

Wayne does not play 3H as game forcing, he playes it as nf,
although constructive.
With kind regards
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#10 User is offline   Hanoi5 

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Posted 2008-October-23, 03:58

5 after the double, I don't like the Pass.

 wyman, on 2012-May-04, 09:48, said:

Also, he rates to not have a heart void when he leads the 3.


 rbforster, on 2012-May-20, 21:04, said:

Besides playing for fun, most people also like to play bridge to win


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#11 User is offline   mikeh 

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Posted 2008-October-23, 09:49

Pass would have been forcing in virtually all standard based methods. 3, by promising another call, is effectively gf even if your partnership doesn't use that language.

4 is clear: raising hearts is misguided.. the spade suit is self-sufficient.. the hand is a one suiter...

I don't especially like the double, since it suggests 2 club losers.

When the opps find a fit and preempt, a simple and often effective rule is to consider that a 2 card holding is bad news, but either a stiff or 3 cards are good... the assumption is that the opps, having preempted to a high level, will hold 9-11 cards, with 9-10 being statistically more probable.

So S's stiff, plus his (only) spade card, coupled with partner showing a strong suit, is encouraging. Also, the bidding, in which LHO announced diamond length and strength, hints at partner's heart support..... partner opened and bid 4 and rates to hold 6-7 points in the blacks, and not much in diamonds. That is enough to make me consider a fp.

As it is, after the double, N has a tough call, since most would assume that the double suggests two club losers. Now, as Josh points out, the upside of a bid is low, and the downside considerable. So I think that S's borderline double will compel most Norths to pass, as it did here.

As these comments suggest, I don't think either partner did anything terribly wrong... if your teammates also blasted to 5, and the opps got to slam, they deserve the imps :huh:
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#12 User is offline   han 

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Posted 2008-October-23, 09:54

Codo, on Oct 23 2008, 01:47 AM, said:

I hate the 4 Spade bid most.
The double was bad too, but do I really have a hand, where I should look for an own slam opposite a partner who bid 1 4 ?

What would you bid instead?
Please note: I am interested in boring, bog standard, 2/1.

- hrothgar
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#13 User is offline   Apollo81 

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Posted 2008-October-23, 10:07

agree with mikeh's post
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#14 User is offline   kenrexford 

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Posted 2008-October-23, 10:23

I don't get a couple of things with respect to the analyses so far. First, how on earth is 4 right? Second, and related, how the heck do you end up with a 5-level forcing pass or not decision?

I mean, North has a five-loser hand with self-playing spades. Partner has just bid a values 3, and a 4 fit bid has just been made. I cannot imagine only bidding 4. 5 makes some sense, but not 4.

What, I'm supposed to expect that clubs are 7-2-2-2 when Advancer has forced the five-level? Sure, could be. But, 7-3-2-1 seems a wild favorite. I think I can also rely on partner to at least have two of the three critical cards (K, A, K).

I could imagine passing 4 as well, which has to be forcing, since Advancer has forced his partner to bid. That seems obvious as forcing.

4 is about the weakest possible bid, with a contextual monster.
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#15 User is offline   ArtK78 

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Posted 2008-October-23, 10:43

I also agree with Mikeh's post.

There was an article in The Bridge World some years ago titled "High Level Bidding." I know I have mentioned the article before. The point of the article, (a point also made by Mikeh) is that a holding of 2 small in the opponent's suit is a warning sign and strongly suggests that you double in these situations. Any other holding suggests bidding more, whether directly or by means of a forcing pass and pull.

Of course, if you have an I HAVE GOT THEM penalty double that overrides everything else.
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#16 User is offline   mikeh 

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Posted 2008-October-23, 10:47

Quote

4 is about the weakest possible bid, with a contextual monster.


I agree that the hand has grown up on the auction, especially the 3 call, but 4 is NOT a weakness call. We need to send a message about the nature of our hand.. that message is all about spades, and I do not think that this hand is (quite)good enough to pass 4 and then pull a double to 4.... your micrometer may differ.

And this hand definitely is NOT about hearts... if partner lacks the spade A, our hand may take very few tricks in a high-level heart contract... either we get tapped early or someone has 4 hearts, and we can kiss this hand goodbye... compare that using partner's hearts with spades as trump.
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#17 User is offline   han 

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Posted 2008-October-23, 11:28

I would also bid 4S. I do think that the hand is good enough to pass and pull a double of 4D to 4S but I think that it is very unlikely that we get that opportunity.
Please note: I am interested in boring, bog standard, 2/1.

- hrothgar
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#18 User is offline   Cascade 

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Posted 2008-October-23, 12:50

P_Marlowe, on Oct 23 2008, 09:01 PM, said:

peachy, on Oct 22 2008, 08:03 PM, said:

I would like to know what creates a Forcing Pass situation if a GF does not do it (for Wayne)?

Wayne does not play 3H as game forcing, he playes it as nf,
although constructive.

This is true but even if I did a mere game force does not create a forcing pass for me.

1. Those that play 3 as forcing in my observation often shade the values for that bid - that must diminish the utility of a forcing pass

2. On this hand with a stiff spade and a stiff club south doubled the same call he would make with a much stronger club holding because he was unwilling to make a forcing pass or take some action without sure knowledge of a playable fit

3. My opponents are not always insane when they are also making constructive bids (4 fit showing) sometimes they can make something - here 5 is only so poor because of the stiff spade and stiff diamond in the NS hands

4. Forcing pass is problematic on hands like this where we have not had explict suit agreement

For these reasons and probably some others we do not play forcing passes based on a mere game force. Especially not in an auction where we have been pushed around. Usually a strength showing slam try would establish a force.
Wayne Burrows

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#19 User is offline   jdonn 

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Posted 2008-October-23, 13:10

Cascade, on Oct 23 2008, 01:50 PM, said:

[snip] ... a mere game force does not create a forcing pass for me.

1.  Those that play 3 as forcing in my observation often shade the values for that bid - that must diminish the utility of a forcing pass

2. On this hand with a stiff spade and a stiff club south doubled the same call he would make with a much stronger club holding because he was unwilling to make a forcing pass or take some action without sure knowledge of a playable fit

3. My opponents are not always insane when they are also making constructive bids (4 fit showing) sometimes they can make something - here 5 is only so poor because of the stiff spade and stiff diamond in the NS hands

4. Forcing pass is problematic on hands like this where we have not had explict suit agreement

I am usually of the mind that too many passes are played as forcing, but I still am not seeing it from your perspective here.

1. I can't think of a game-forcing bid that is not frequently stretched. I really don't think that's a very good reason, especially on an auction where neither player supported the other.

2. Admittedly this is a difficult hand, but at the very least there is controversy over whether south should have doubled or not. But I don't think the fact south happened to choose the wrong option means it would be an improvement to reduce him from three options to two.

3. True they aren't always insane, but the main purpose isn't to see when we can slaughter them, it's to accurately judge if we can make our contract a level higher. Even if they aren't usually insane (and let's be honest, sometimes they are, or they run into awful breaks) they will still be down most of the time.

4. I think it is on just such a hand where it can be most helpful. For example, if south had passed then north can use the knowledge of his unshown heart fit as a good reason to be bidding on. If south doubles when not playing a forcing pass, north has a lot more of a guess as all south is really showing in that case is a good hand.
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#20 User is offline   rogerclee 

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Posted 2008-October-23, 13:13

Wayne I think you are really going overboard by saying that 3 GF here should not establish a forcing pass. I think you are really overestimating the percentage of time that 3 is shaded here and really underestimating the benefit that a FP here gives. When the opponents put you at a decision like this, and it is very probable that it is our hand, it is very important to be able to say "I don't want to defend" or "I want to defend." If you don't play a FP here, then the 3 bidder has to double just to be able to say "Yes I actually had a game force" for fear that partner will pass out 5 on nondescript minimum hands.

My opponents are not always insane when they preempt, sometimes they are only going for 300 against our game! I think it is absurd to try to accommodate the one hand in fifty where it is right to just pass out 5.
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