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Bid this hand

#1 User is offline   Michael000 

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Posted 2015-January-01, 15:45



North opens 1 how would you respond with this hand, why and what next?

This was my hand opposite a unknown partner in the BBO Acol Bridge club. I understand that most of you do not play Acol. There are no tricks questions here, I am posting this solely to get an insight into the thought processes of others.
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#2 User is offline   Fluffy 

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Posted 2015-January-01, 15:51

no matter the system you start with 2 and continue from there.
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#3 User is offline   mikeh 

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Posted 2015-January-01, 16:32

Any bets that we'll be told that with this many hcp we have to make a strong jump shift?
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari
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#4 User is offline   Michael000 

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Posted 2015-January-01, 17:09

View Postmikeh, on 2015-January-01, 16:32, said:

Any bets that we'll be told that with this many hcp we have to make a strong jump shift?


OK - Here's my £20 where's yours? . . . . . Are you stalking me?
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#5 User is offline   diana_eva 

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Posted 2015-January-01, 17:19

As fluffy posted, make a 2/1 forcing bid (2) and take it from there.

#6 User is offline   Michael000 

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Posted 2015-January-01, 17:21

OK here we go. . . .

What do I know?

I know partner has at least 12hcp and less than 19hcp. I know she has either 4 very good spades or more likely (as I hold a singleton) 5 or 6 spades. I know I have 17hcp. I know that we don't have a fit in spades. I also know that if we have a joint hcp count in excess of 30hcp we have a possible slam. These are the things I know.

I have a choice of bids none of which is spades. I am concerned not to miss a possible slam (am I wrong). What is the best bid and WHY? What is the plan to identify whether we have slam points/shape?
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#7 User is offline   helene_t 

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Posted 2015-January-01, 17:31

2 is clear, if only because every other bid would misdescribe the hand.

If partner now rebids a non-forcing 2, probably 3NT is enough. But if he raises clubs, or rebids a red suit, or makes some strong rebid, slam could very easily be on.

What did partner respond to 2? The next bid may be more difficult.
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#8 User is offline   PhilKing 

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Posted 2015-January-01, 17:37

2 CLUBS!

This is called bidding our suits up the line, as fully endorsed in "Modern ACOL". Hopefully, partner will make an ACOL rebid that helps us diagnose whether a slam is on, and in which strain.






Either that or bid a direct Gerber. :blink:
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#9 User is online   mike777 

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Posted 2015-January-01, 17:42

2c per this site it looks like.
It looks like a jump shift needs 5+ or support but 2c is normally 5+ but not 100%
Not sure what rebid will be perhaps 3nt or 4nt quant?

Responses to 1 of a suit[edit]
Pass - less than 6 HCP
2 of opener's suit - at least four-card support and 6-9 HCP. Limit bid.
3 of opener's suit - at least four-card support and 10-12 HCP. Invites game if opener has requisite strength (14 HCP or more). Limit bid.
4 of opener's suit - at least five-card support for opener's major and 6-10 HCP, this is pre-emptive and to play.
1NT - 6-9 HCP, denies ability to bid at 2 level. Not necessarily balanced. Limit bid.
2NT - balanced, 10-12 HCP. Limit bid.
3NT - balanced, 13-15 HCP. Limit bid.
1 of a new suit - promises at least four cards in the suit bid, 6 HCP upwards. Forcing for one round.
2 of a new suit (below 2 of opener's suit) - normally 5-card suit, at least a good 8 or 9 HCP. Forcing for one round
Jump in a new suit - 5-card suit (or support for partner), at least 16 HCP, Game force.

note: these last three bids may conceal 4-card support for opener's suit, whereas the three NT responses deny 4-card support for opener, and also normally deny holding a 4 card major biddable at the 1 level
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acol
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#10 User is offline   scarletv 

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Posted 2015-January-01, 18:18


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#11 User is offline   mikeh 

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Posted 2015-January-01, 19:18

View Postscarletv, on 2015-January-01, 18:18, said:



If this is the hand, then the key is to avoid a high-level club contract

I think it to be generally accepted even in Modern ACOL that a 2H response should deliver 5 cards. As Phil says, the correct response in ACOL is 2C

I think an intelligent auction thereafter is:

1S. 2C
3C. 3H
3N. 4N
P


3H was an exploratory call, showing either interest in 3N or a cue bid exploring for a club contract

3N is clear, since the principle of 'game before slam' is a universal principle of good bidding, no matter the system, other than purely artificial methods

Aware that opener has spade and diamond values, and with a poor club suit, responder isn't in a position to commit to clubs, but has too many values to pass 3N so makes a simple, quantitative invite with a natural 4N. I appreciate that many inexperienced players think that. 4N. Is usually, if not always, ace asking or keycard, but one of huge most common exceptions is a raise of a natural 3N to 4N. This is, in the absence of special agreement, virtually always played by good players as quantitative.
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#12 User is offline   the hog 

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Posted 2015-January-01, 20:21

2C of course.Mike's continuation makes sense. What else?

Two other points
1) What would you open on Jxxxx AKQ AKQJ x
You open a strong 2 in S? With this S suit? Even a Benjy 2 is poor. 2C? This is not a gf! 2NT? Even worse. This is a 20 count. Every Acolite I know would open this 1S.

2) You STILL, (and this is the third time I am asking), have not explained how you will stay out of slam without using cue bids or asking bids with the following:

AQxxx
QJx
xxx
Axx

and bid it with

AQxxx
Kxx
xxx
Axx

opposite:

KJxx
xx
AKQJx
Kx
"The King of Hearts a broadsword bears, the Queen of Hearts a rose." W. H. Auden.
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#13 User is offline   Trinidad 

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Posted 2015-January-01, 23:23

I have a dissenting opinion on this.

What do we want to find out more than anything? We are eager to know whether partner has four hearts. We are playing opposite an unknown partner. We need to maximize the probability of him showing them when he has them.

Now suppose partner has a 5=4=4=0 or a 5=4=0=4 distribution. What will he bid? Some would bid 2 after our 2 response. But many would bid 2 up the line with the 5=4=4=0 (which means that our subsequent 2 rebid will be 4th suit, complicating matters) or raise clubs with the 5=4=0=4.

If, instead of responding 2, I respond 2, then opener might still raise, now with the 5=4=4=0 distribution. Because of my honor structure in the minors, a diamond raise with club shortness suits me better than a club raise with diamond shortness. So that is already a slight improvement over a 2 response. But if he has the 5=4=0=4 hand, he wouldn't even think of introducing his clubs. He would rebid 2 and I have achieved my goal. That is a big improvement over the 2 response.

So, I would respond 2.

Rik
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#14 User is offline   mikeh 

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Posted 2015-January-01, 23:31

View PostTrinidad, on 2015-January-01, 23:23, said:

I have a dissenting opinion on this.

What do we want to find out more than anything? We are eager to know whether partner has four hearts. We are playing opposite an unknown partner. We need to maximize the probability of him showing them when he has them.

Now suppose partner has a 5=4=4=0 or a 5=4=0=4 distribution. What will he bid? Some would bid 2 after our 2 response. But many would bid 2 up the line with the 5=4=4=0 (which means that our subsequent 2 rebid will be 4th suit, complicating matters) or raise clubs with the 5=4=0=4.

If, instead of responding 2, I respond 2, then opener might still raise, now with the 5=4=4=0 distribution. Because of my honor structure in the minors, a diamond raise with club shortness suits me better than a club raise with diamond shortness. So that is already a slight improvement over a 2 response. But if he has the 5=4=0=4 hand, he wouldn't even think of introducing his clubs. He would rebid 2 and I have achieved my goal. That is a big improvement over the 2 response.

So, I would respond 2.

Rik

I don't agree with you at all. I do not think that any good player would bid 2D with 5440. That strikes me as an automatic 2H rebid, especially in a method in which the 2/1 response was not a gf. The partnership needs 4SF so responser's 2H is not natural, which makes confirming a 4=4 fit impossible below game, which cannot be playable when responder is unlimited.
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#15 User is offline   Michael000 

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Posted 2015-January-02, 03:20

View Postthe hog, on 2015-January-01, 20:21, said:


2) You STILL, (and this is the third time I am asking), have not explained how you will stay out of slam without using cue bids or asking bids with the following:


I am avoiding bidding your hand because I don't want to derail the thread. If you want to start a thread with your hand I would very much like to bid it and for my education and your amusement have my bidding analysed and dissected by all and sundry.
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#16 User is offline   Michael000 

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Posted 2015-January-02, 03:33

Post 10 shows the hands in full. Half the pairs playing this hand ended up in 6NT and half in 3NT. Nobody made 6NT. It's easy looking at all the hands. The question I wanted to explore in posting this thread was how you (I mean you) pursue interest in a slam, b that I mean you must have some mechanism for alerting partner to your strength and more importantly exiting before you are up too high.

I consensus appears to be 2 and with sight of the hand and actual bidding it seems reasonable that partner would have bid 2 and I am then very comfortable with a jump shift bid of 3 showing strength. And, it's simple then seeing all the hands to pass out at 3NT. Clearly as half the field (not us) ended up in 6NT they thought they had values which encouraged them to go down that route.
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#17 User is offline   Michael000 

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Posted 2015-January-02, 03:58

And let me explain the rationale behind my bidding.

We are playing 4cm and there is a possibility that not bidding the hearts would be seen by partner as denying a 4cm. Also in biding 2 it gave partner the opportunity of bidding 2NT showing 16HCP and I would then have gone looking for slam confident that we had slam points. Re-bidding her spades showed a minimum of 5 spades but also denied any strength hence my exit to 3NT. The problem with my bidding is that if she had held 15HCP there may have been a slam on and my (our) bidding may not have been good enough to find it. Hence this post.
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#18 User is offline   eagles123 

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Posted 2015-January-02, 04:20

the problem with bidding 2h is that it should promise 5 and so partner will raise u on 3. Why play in an unnecessary mosain when bidding 2c would discover the potential H fit anyway??
"definitely that's what I like to play when I'm playing standard - I want to be able to bid diamonds because bidding good suits is important in bridge" - Meckstroth's opinion on weak 2 diamond
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#19 User is offline   wank 

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Posted 2015-January-02, 04:40

View PostMichael000, on 2015-January-02, 03:58, said:



there is a possibility that not bidding the hearts would be seen by partner as denying a 4cm.


no more than the possibility that 2C would be seen as showing 7 diamonds.

this really isn't advanced bidding at all. everyone plays 2h as 5+ and knows that 2C might contain a heart suit. prepare to be shocked, but with a 3433 shape, the correct response would still be 2C on a 3 card suit, because it's better to give a false impression about minors than majors.

i don't want to be harsh, and you may be a decent card player, but playing in your club has given you a warped perspective of your knowledge about the game. if you played in an EBU tournament or even a decent sized county event, you would find yourself getting carted out.
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#20 User is offline   PhilKing 

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Posted 2015-January-02, 05:06

To me, the correct Acol auction is. 1-2-3-3NT. You can't really do that in most other systems, and the key is that 3 is non-forcing showing a minimum.

Slam could be reasonable, but is not laydown even opposite:

KQxxx
xx
Ax
KQxx

where you need both black suits to behave to have 12 on top. With extras partner should splinter, since even Acol plays a new suit as forcing by opener after a 2-over-1.
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