Can you just pass? Competitive bidding decision Is this a forcing pass situation?
#3
Posted 2014-January-28, 17:57
A. No.
Q. Is there any reason from partner's bidding that suggests I have to do something here?
A. No. Partner couldn't open the bidding or do anything over opponents' 5H bid.
Therefore I pass.
#4
Posted 2014-January-28, 18:02
#5
Posted 2014-January-28, 18:42
diana_eva, on 2014-January-28, 17:13, said:
Pass by your partner cannot be forcing. He has limited his hand to 12 HCP. Dealer is limited to 12 HCP. So, either you or opener has a stack of points (or dealer miscounted).
If you (as doubler) have a motherload of HCP, then you will make some intelligent bid when it comes back to you. If opener has points, he is either A: Bidding 6 or B: Passing, hoping slam is unreachable
Simply put, if partner's pass would be forcing, then it would be a very silly way to play it. Pass just shows no desire to compete at the five level opposite a typical X in this auction.
#6
Posted 2014-January-28, 20:11
I would double on this hand since I have a minimum and non-extreme shape.
I assume the people who commented that this is a silly and exploitable agreement didn't realize the 5♥ bidder was a passed hand. It's hard to have a lock for 11 tricks opposite a third seat preempt as a passed hand.
#7
Posted 2014-January-28, 21:03
karlson, on 2014-January-28, 20:11, said:
Concerning silly:
Having the pass be forcing means we are committing ourselves to action at a level where it's not at all clear whether we should be doing so. Game in hearts may be the normal result and we can no longer achieve that.
Concerning exploitable:
No - I just don't believe your agreements are going to be sophisticated enough to distinguish between the times when your opponent is a passed hand and when they're not. If they do, I am impressed.
#8
Posted 2014-January-29, 02:16
#9
Posted 2014-January-29, 05:52
sfi, on 2014-January-28, 21:03, said:
No - I just don't believe your agreements are going to be sophisticated enough to distinguish between the times when your opponent is a passed hand and when they're not. If they do, I am impressed.
I've had this in my agreements since the early 90's, though it has never made a difference.
#10
Posted 2014-January-29, 06:10
helene_t, on 2014-January-29, 02:16, said:
I missed that discussion, but the reason I posted this question is that it's been asked by my partner too over at bridgewinners and a number of high profile players answered that for them this would be indeed a forcing pass situation. I tend to trust their overall experience more than my gut feeling of "how can this be forcing"
The real deal at the table was easier. I had one king more and doubled 5H, not knowing that my pd had alerted pass as forcing. He had a 9-10 po hand with 5 spades and lots of quacks. Opps went down 2 on a misplay, they could have easily kept it to -1. 5S would go down too, but we would have made 4S.
So what options are there for the doubler over a FP understood as such? Can doubler bid 5S or something else on a 4 carder? When should he do so?
If advancer pulls the second x to 5S, after passing 5H, would that show slam interest?
#11
Posted 2014-January-29, 07:12
#12
Posted 2014-January-29, 08:39
#13
Posted 2014-January-29, 10:30
Cyberyeti, on 2014-January-29, 08:39, said:
So we should pass even if pass is forcing? Nice argument; I think you are right.
#14
Posted 2014-January-29, 14:04
Nil vul.
x
Jx
QJTx
AKQxxx
After 2 passes I tried 3C. LHO with 5413 shape made a normal overcall of 3S and played it there with a 6-1 break. It turns out that both sides can make 11 tricks - them in hearts and us in clubs, so we didn't achieve the par contract. But the team picked up 7 and should have picked up 12 except for a very strange decision at the other table.
The moral is that just because 3rd seat made a "weak" opening bid and their partner suggested that they don't want you to play in 4S, it doesn't have to be our hand. They have a big fit and their values are still unclear.
#15
Posted 2014-January-29, 14:23
While I see that there might be a method to play FP in such a situation (which probably makes even more sense if we're red vs white for instance), it doesn't seem to gain much overall since doubler is left to guess a lot and is more likely to guess wrong than advancer. IMO a take out x conveys enough info about the shape and strength for advancer to be able to do something intelligent, instead of passing the ball back to his partner who has zero info about what advancer might hold (except that he wasn't able to open, which doesn't make the decision any easier).
#16
Posted 2014-January-29, 14:32
game, hence you can pass.
The 2H in 3rd can be wide ranging.
If p would not be a passed hand, you have to treat his pass as
forcing, and X.
With kind regards
Marlowe
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#17
Posted 2014-January-29, 14:35
Rik
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the new discoveries, is not “Eureka!” (I found it!), but “That’s funny…” – Isaac Asimov
The only reason God did not put "Thou shalt mind thine own business" in the Ten Commandments was that He thought that it was too obvious to need stating. - Kenberg
#18
Posted 2014-January-29, 15:37
Vampyr, on 2014-January-29, 10:30, said:
No, I said I don't think it's forcing, but I could see why partner might think it was (effectively our hand is the reason it isn't, but partner never considered we could have a hand that bad). Even if partner wanted it to be forcing, I think pass is probably correct opposite anything WE couldn't open, that may not be true for people who open more conservatively than we do.
#19
Posted 2014-January-30, 10:14