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Was this right to bid or pass.... No agreement with patner

#1 User is offline   mojila 

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Posted 2014-July-22, 14:15

Hi,
I find forum for me learning from different perspective. I am Intermediate level. Following hand I picked up
in Match-point tourney with pick up partner. Had no agreement. MY RHO opened 1!D



RHO opened 1Diamond I bid 2Notrum... Should i have bid ? Pass and wait for my partner over call. My partner's Profile
said Expert. My LHO passes. My partner had following hand. He bids 6Spades.



Thanks in advance for suggestions and Opinions.

Mojila

Edit: had made mistake in posting wrote Club instead RHO openign bid 1Diamond.

This post has been edited by mojila: 2014-July-22, 16:15

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#2 User is offline   chasetb 

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Posted 2014-July-22, 14:47

1.) You should NOT have bid. Most people play that (1) - 2NT shows + ; a small minority still play it as + . You had neither of these hands, and so should Pass.

2.) Partner is 100% to blame for 6. If you are showing + , you could still be off A and A, so no jumping to any slam. With a pick-up partner, I cannot tell you what to bid, but as North I would have bid 3 (forcing) followed by 4.
"It's not enough to win the tricks that belong to you. Try also for some that belong to the opponents."

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"One advantage of bad bidding is that you get practice at playing atrocious contracts."

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#3 User is offline   billw55 

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Posted 2014-July-22, 14:59

2NT is definitely bad. Different meanings for this are used by different players, but none of them fit this hand.

Most often, when you have length in the suit that is opened on your right, it is best to pass.

Here I think pass is definitely best.

Your partner's choice of 6 was likely based on his idea of what your 2NT bid meant. Perhaps he thought you were showing a strong balanced hand. (Although, if your partner was expert, he should not think this.) Anyway, this is what can happen when you don't have good understandings with your partner.

[edit: OP has corrected the opening bid by RHO from 1 to 1. In this case, 2NT is ok, showing two lowest unbid suits. 6 is still very bad.]
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#4 User is offline   mojila 

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Posted 2014-July-22, 16:05

Thanks for replies. appreciate very much.
Also sorry after posting I realized made mistake in posting.
Oepning Bid by RHO was 1Diamond not 1Club.

mojila
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#5 User is offline   whereagles 

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Posted 2014-July-22, 16:23

overcall seems ok to me. pard's 6 was over the roof.
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#6 User is offline   steve2005 

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Posted 2014-July-22, 17:18

some people define unusual (and Michaels) type hands the 3 most common ranges are 5+, 8+ and 5-11 or 15+.

also some people don't like to have a wide difference in length between the two suits.

need to decide which camp your in
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#7 User is offline   mojila 

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Posted 2014-July-22, 18:07

Steve,Bill

I agree with your statements. I recently came across articles regarding Ghestem and Questem(inverted Ghestem).
AS two suited hands some time difficult to describe. Also when distribution is unballanced then tricks taking
capability is more important than Point counts. Michael as well as UnNorum both are in preemptive in nature
and conventional bid. Though one can use with Loaded points. Ghestem and Questem removes the ambiguity of one suite unknown. Describes exactly which two suites holding. It is always problem with pick up partners. Bridge is Partnership game.
e.g. 1 2 .. and two highest.
1 2NT ....... and two Lowest
1 3 .. and Highest and Lowest
knowing both suites partner can know 8 cards fit. if has 3 cards in known suite.
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#8 User is offline   SteveMoe 

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Posted 2014-July-22, 21:47

This is a highly distributional hand. If you play 2N as Unusual for the 2 lowest unbid suits then 1 - 2N is definitely appropriate. This hand is a 5.5 to 6-loser. Partner now knows you have 10+ cards in the round suits ( & . With partner's actual hand, 4 is a good target. Partner should start with a 3[d] cue bid and you can rebid 4 to suggest longer than . Partner will correct to 4 though exploring slam and stopping in 5 is also possible. Many would play 4N by partner as 6-Key Card Blackwood.

Trick-taking potential and not HCP is more important here. Even playing (a conservative) 8+ HCP agreement and 5=5 or better in both suits, I would bid 2N, justifying my decision with the 5=7 patterns and working HCP. Were your honors in the pointed suits I would pass! (Too many losers/in the pointed suits they are not working to create length tricks).

Partner has no business bidding in this auction except as a control bid.

Be sure to talk with partner how to advance 2-suited bids with strong hands.
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#9 User is offline   the hog 

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Posted 2014-July-22, 22:30

If over 1D 2NT shows the bottom two, then this is ok if not vulnerable.
Your partner's 6S bid was a beginner's bid.
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#10 User is offline   Free 

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Posted 2014-July-24, 13:08

View Postmojila, on 2014-July-22, 14:15, said:

My partner's Profile said Expert.

Some countries only have "Experts", and these guys usually consider everything natural. I guess this expert had a red flag with some symbol on it...

2NT playing unusual is ok, and imo it's ok to expect partner to understand it. 6 is nuts.
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#11 User is offline   whereagles 

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Posted 2014-July-24, 13:48

as someone said, "those kind of experts you buy at the local bazaar at 0.10 cents a kilo"
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#12 User is offline   neilkaz 

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Posted 2014-July-24, 13:56

View Postwhereagles, on 2014-July-22, 16:23, said:

overcall seems ok to me. pard's 6 was over the roof.

One wonders how he managed to restrain himself and didn't bid 7?
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#13 User is offline   Lorne50 

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Posted 2014-July-24, 14:08

Your partner is an idiot. Your bid shows the lowest two unbid suits and that is what you have, and your bid is fine. In some countries some people play 2N as always both minors but I do not believe that is the meaning anybody should use unless it is explicitly agreed.
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#14 User is offline   rmnka447 

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Posted 2014-July-24, 14:49

I probably wouldn't have bid with your hand, but if you're going to bid -- 2 NT showing the lower 2 suits seems right.

Since you are showing the lower 2 suits(i.e. and ), partner should have bid 4 . Partner has a big fit in and working cards in , so the hand takes a lot of tricks in s.

6 is completely out of the realm of reality.
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#15 User is offline   Bbradley62 

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Posted 2014-July-24, 18:08

Maybe partner didn't see opponent's opening bid.
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#16 User is offline   johnu 

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Posted 2014-July-24, 20:23

45.4% of those players who self rate as experts actually play at a beginner level. Depending on what country they claim to be from, up to 95.2% of self rated world class players are intermediate players or worse.

On the internet, anybody can claim to be an expert or world class player. When one of these players makes a ridiculous bid like 6 or play that you are sure is ridiculous but have doubts only because of the player's rating, believe the bid or play until proven otherwise.
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