1 bidding problem, 1 play problem
#1
Posted 2010-October-18, 17:06
--------------------
Q1: r/r imps
Ax / 7xxx / KJx / Axxx
1H-(4D)-?
Follow-up: if you choose 4H, LHO bids 4S. Check check back to you.
---------------------
Q2: r/r imps
KQTx / AT8 / ATx / QTx
p-p-1d-1n
p-3n-ap
lead is the H3, ostensibly 4th best, 2 not visible.
Dummy: xx / Jxx / Qxx / AKxxx
small from dummy to the 7 and your 8.
What do you think possible shapes are around the table, and what's your plan for 9 tricks?
"...we live off being battle-scarred veterans who manage to hate our opponents slightly more than we hate each other.” -- Hamman, re: Wolff
#2
Posted 2010-October-18, 17:45
George Carlin
#3
Posted 2010-October-18, 17:48
George Carlin
#4
Posted 2010-October-18, 18:04
The play problem is hard. Obviously you'll be ok if clubs break, otherwise you can lead spades up twice which is eight tricks and it seems like RHO will be under pressure if only you had a card to throw him in with. If LHO has the club length it would pay to duck a heart before his long club is established. But either way you could go down if LHO has the ♦J. Are you sure we don't have a diamond spot that would help if we end up playing them from hand needing RHO to win?
#5
Posted 2010-October-18, 18:28
Dummy play hand -- The lead appears to be from ♥KQ9xx as neither leading a 4-card side suit nor false-carding makes sense on the auction. RHO's light 3rd hand opener and LHO's silence over 1NT, and lead, all portend 6-1 ♦s, hence fair chance for 4-1 clubs. So ♣Q, ♣ duck. Win heart return, run clubs and lead a spade from dummy to my remaining
KQ10, --, A10x, --
Win the ♠K and judge whether to exit in ♠ or ♦. It shouldn't be too hard; possibly either exit will work.
#6
Posted 2010-October-18, 18:44
nigel_k, on Oct 18 2010, 07:04 PM, said:
I wish we did.
"...we live off being battle-scarred veterans who manage to hate our opponents slightly more than we hate each other.” -- Hamman, re: Wolff
#7
Posted 2010-October-18, 20:25
ceeb, on Oct 18 2010, 07:28 PM, said:
Dummy play hand -- The lead appears to be from ♥KQ9xx as neither leading a 4-card side suit nor false-carding makes sense on the auction. RHO's light 3rd hand opener and LHO's silence over 1NT, and lead, all portend 6-1 ♦s, hence fair chance for 4-1 clubs. So ♣Q, ♣ duck. Win heart return, run clubs and lead a spade from dummy to my remaining
KQ10, --, A10x, --
Win the ♠K and judge whether to exit in ♠ or ♦. It shouldn't be too hard; possibly either exit will work.
Neither works, as it turns out.
"...we live off being battle-scarred veterans who manage to hate our opponents slightly more than we hate each other.” -- Hamman, re: Wolff
#8
Posted 2010-October-18, 21:35
the Freman, Chani from the move "Dune"
"I learned long ago, never to wrestle with a pig. You get dirty, and besides, the pig likes it."
George Bernard Shaw
#9
Posted 2010-October-18, 21:40
pooltuna, on Oct 18 2010, 10:35 PM, said:
For us, X is negative in this auction. 4D is diamonds.
"...we live off being battle-scarred veterans who manage to hate our opponents slightly more than we hate each other.” -- Hamman, re: Wolff
#10
Posted 2010-October-18, 22:04
wyman, on Oct 18 2010, 10:40 PM, said:
pooltuna, on Oct 18 2010, 10:35 PM, said:
For us, X is negative in this auction. 4D is diamonds.
Which double is negative, if you had doubled 4♦ or if you double 4♠?
Never tell the same lie twice. - Elim Garek on the real moral of "The boy who cried wolf"
#11
Posted 2010-October-18, 22:07
BunnyGo, on Oct 18 2010, 11:04 PM, said:
wyman, on Oct 18 2010, 10:40 PM, said:
pooltuna, on Oct 18 2010, 10:35 PM, said:
For us, X is negative in this auction. 4D is diamonds.
Which double is negative, if you had doubled 4♦ or if you double 4♠?
1H-4D-X is neg
1H-4D-4H-4S
p-p-X
is business
"...we live off being battle-scarred veterans who manage to hate our opponents slightly more than we hate each other.” -- Hamman, re: Wolff
#12
Posted 2010-October-20, 06:37
On hand 2, LHO is Jxx/Kxxx/xx/J9xx
So anyway, I can make the hand by playing the SK to RHO's ace, winning
the heart return and firing back a heart, pitching a D from dummy and
a spade from hand on the 4th heart. Then I win the diamond return,
cash two clubs ending in dummy, duck a diamond to RHO, win his return
(spade or diamond), cash my winner in the other (diamond or spade),
squeezing LHO in the blacks.
I did not find this at the table.
"...we live off being battle-scarred veterans who manage to hate our opponents slightly more than we hate each other.” -- Hamman, re: Wolff
#13
Posted 2010-October-20, 06:40
Anyway I don't think partner should pull the X with his nearly balanced hand.
George Carlin
#14
Posted 2010-October-20, 06:44
gwnn, on 2010-October-20, 06:40, said:
Anyway I don't think partner should pull the X with his nearly balanced hand.
Sorry, you are right. It shows cards, not necessarily in spades. Partner would pass here for sure.
edit: Because this was an issue before, I'm talking about a double of 4S, at my second call of this auction. A double of 4D is surely negative per our agreements.
"...we live off being battle-scarred veterans who manage to hate our opponents slightly more than we hate each other.” -- Hamman, re: Wolff
#15
Posted 2010-October-20, 09:00
#16
Posted 2010-October-20, 09:10
karlson, on 2010-October-20, 09:00, said:
Right, you just have to guess that hearts are 4-3. At T1, it looked a lot like KQxxx opp xx, especially after RHO played a middle heart. Then if diamonds were 6-1, RHO has sufficiently few points that (especially red), his hand sort of looks like a 2D opener. So now I'm guessing 5-2 diamonds. Now RHO and LHO both have 6 black cards, and it doesn't seem that crazy to *not* duck a club anymore, so I didn't. And I was punished for it.
I guess ducking the club is somewhat safe -- i.e., there are a lot of possibilities for 9 still, but man it just felt wrong at the time.
"...we live off being battle-scarred veterans who manage to hate our opponents slightly more than we hate each other.” -- Hamman, re: Wolff
#17
Posted 2010-October-20, 12:25
karlson, on 2010-October-20, 09:00, said:
All valid, but
1. I'd be a little surprised to see a ♥ continuation from LHO after the ♣ duck. Possible I guess if LHO can read a lot into RHO's discard on the 2nd ♣. But at least on the surface from LHO's point of view declarer has ♥s bottled and both of the other suits are plausible switches.
2. If LHO does try a ♠ or ♦ we can more or less claim. If a ♣, back to plan A but if my misapprehension about the ♥ lie persists even after the defenders discard on the ♣ suit, I might misguess the ending.
3. If a ♥ is continued, I agree you can and have to duck it.
This post has been edited by ceeb: 2010-October-20, 12:30
#18
Posted 2010-October-21, 04:41
gwnn, on 2010-October-20, 06:40, said:
Anyway I don't think partner should pull the X with his nearly balanced hand.
I am not convinced.
The opening hand has now at best one defensive trick to contribute to the defense.
I deem it likely that 4S DBL will make after this bidding by strong opponents and if 4S DBL fails, 5H will be cheap.
When in doubt bid one more. One of the agreements I like, but few players below the expert level seem to understand, is that any double after showing a fit is only a suggestion and should frequently be overruled.
Opening light has its cost. This hand is deceptive. Even though all its points are in the long suit and it has a nominal 2 quick tricks this ace less hand is not worth 12 HCP. (10 HCP is about right). I prefer to open this hand with a weak two in hearts, unless you have a way to show a weak two-suiter with hearts and a minor, mostly because it has a very low defense potential and an opening bid should suggest more. Do not get me wrong, this is not an advertisement for Roth Stone type opening, only in proper hand evaluation. If I held xx AJTxx xx AJxx I would open 1H and happily pass 4S DBL.
Not that I expect many to understand these arguments in advanced hand evaluation.
Rainer Herrmann
#19
Posted 2010-October-21, 05:43
edit: I guess I should explain in a little more detail.
I agree with "when in doubt, bid one more", but I don't think there's a reasonable doubt here. Partner could have a lot of different shapes here and I think opps were a little bit lucky that they found a 9 card fit after this start. I think bridge players (according to jlall, especially good bridge players*) tend to bid 4♠ too often over 4♥. A 6 card suit with just a little texture in practice will suffice to most people. Therefore pulling the double of 4♠ to 5♥ because we do not have a lot of defence seems a little too pessimistic to me. You should only pull the double when you have significant extra offensive potential - longer hearts or shorter spades. 2524 does not look offensive enough to me. 1525 would be fine.
just to make myself clear (at the risk of reiterating a previous post): I agree with you that the double by responder on this occasion does not show a clear preference to defend, merely extra values. However, I do not agree with you that it should be frequently pulled, certainly not so frequently as to do it on a 2524.
* http://www.bridgebas...lots-of-hearts/ is the thread, of course it's not the same sequence but it is similar to this one in that the 4S bidder does not know of any spade support from partner. it is different in that the 4H bid does not guarantee a fit 100% but in practice opps have 8 or 9 or 10 hearts almost always
George Carlin
#20
Posted 2010-October-21, 07:08
gwnn, on 2010-October-21, 05:43, said:
edit: I guess I should explain in a little more detail.
I agree with "when in doubt, bid one more", but I don't think there's a reasonable doubt here. Partner could have a lot of different shapes here and I think opps were a little bit lucky that they found a 9 card fit after this start. I think bridge players (according to jlall, especially good bridge players*) tend to bid 4♠ too often over 4♥. A 6 card suit with just a little texture in practice will suffice to most people. Therefore pulling the double of 4♠ to 5♥ because we do not have a lot of defence seems a little too pessimistic to me. You should only pull the double when you have significant extra offensive potential - longer hearts or shorter spades. 2524 does not look offensive enough to me. 1525 would be fine.
just to make myself clear (at the risk of reiterating a previous post): I agree with you that the double by responder on this occasion does not show a clear preference to defend, merely extra values. However, I do not agree with you that it should be frequently pulled, certainly not so frequently as to do it on a 2524.
* http://www.bridgebas...lots-of-hearts/ is the thread, of course it's not the same sequence but it is similar to this one in that the 4S bidder does not know of any spade support from partner. it is different in that the 4H bid does not guarantee a fit 100% but in practice opps have 8 or 9 or 10 hearts almost always
My arguments are different.
I agree with you that a 2=5=2=4 distribution is not attractive for going to the 5 level.
But the first question I try to answer when my partner doubles after having shown a fit and thereby giving me an option, is not whether 5♥ is likely to make, but whether the opponent's contract is likely to fail. If not bidding on is almost always right.
My guess is that I have one defensive trick (but would not be surprised if it turned out to be none). Will my partner contribute three more for his business double showing values? Unlikely. So I would clench my teeth and bid on in spite of my semi balanced distribution. I admit if worse come to worse I might trade -790 for -800, but I consider this unlikely.
By the way on the given auction, where RHO preempted with 4 ♦ over 1 ♥, you can be certain that a good LHO will not come in with a mediocre 6 card ♠ suit, unless he was prepared to raise ♦ all the time, but this is not the case here since he stood his ground over the double. His ♠ are real. I expect him to have a very long solid or semi solid suit. The ♦ preempt is really not an invitation to name another strain.
With regard to
* http://www.bridgebas...lots-of-hearts/
I double for a number of reasons:
I have a strong preempt with defensive values
Partner has already passed. I want him to reconsider with a weak hand: Bid on with ♥, pass with shortage in ♥.
If partner has some values we must protect our plus.
You have pushed opponents to the 4 level and they may have overbid.
I admit that the DBL is ambiguous, because it can also sensibly interpreted as a LIGHTNER double, when the partner of the preemptor is on lead.
The bidding problem here is different in that opponents have voluntarily bid to the 4 level.
Rainer Herrmann