This would be easy if partner had replied 2M, or if you were vulnerable...
Invite or Bash? Bundesliga 2015, Match 1
#1
Posted 2015-January-25, 16:40
This would be easy if partner had replied 2M, or if you were vulnerable...
-- Bertrand Russell
#2
Posted 2015-January-25, 16:42
#4
Posted 2015-January-25, 17:08
#6
Posted 2015-January-25, 17:29
Bbradley62, on 2015-January-25, 17:05, said:
I'd be ashamed of myself for posting this on BBF if we were playing 15-17.
-- Bertrand Russell
#7
Posted 2015-January-25, 17:52
#8
Posted 2015-January-25, 18:04
#9
Posted 2015-January-25, 19:31
I hear that the bulk of your points aren't in partner's suits, you don't have many intermediates, etc. Nonetheless, you do have prime cards in 2 Ks and an A. IMO, they are worth a little more than 10 value especially with the A paired with a 10.
So I'm bidding 3 NT.
Winning IMPs includes bidding and making some thin games. This seems to be the occasion when I take that risk.
#10
Posted 2015-January-25, 19:45
Give value to the A/K/K. Calling this a ten count shows a lack of appreciation of the value of aces and kings, as oppoed to queens and jacks.
14 opp a great 10 will make game about half the time even with good defence. Defence is tougher than declarer play, so this rates to be odds on.
#11
Posted 2015-January-26, 02:39
#12
Posted 2015-January-26, 03:41
#13
Posted 2015-January-26, 04:21
#14
Posted 2015-January-26, 05:35
1- If the responder hold 5332,5m with 10 hcp,I would bid up to 3NT.
2- If the opener's 1nt is 4333 only with 14hcp,hard to believe we are easy to take 9 tricks.
#15
Posted 2015-January-26, 05:38
#16
Posted 2015-January-26, 06:28
NickRW, on 2015-January-26, 04:21, said:
Our most likely up- or downgrade is upgrading a 16 HCP hand to a 1M opening.
-- Bertrand Russell
#17
Posted 2015-January-26, 07:25
Quote
In general, blasting instead of inviting wins you 0.07908.
In general, inviting instead of blasting wins you -0.07908.
=================================================
When we stay low we would have made game 42286 times (42.286%)
When we stay low we would make 8 exactly 43460 times (43.46%)
When we stay low we would make 7 or fewer exactly 14254 times (14.254%)
So on hands where you invite and the invite is declined you lose about 0.08 IMP. This overstates the difference, because on hands where you invite and accept it, you should have closer to 0 IMP difference (0 IMP dd for sure). We only make the 42% of the time, but since 14% of the time we don't make even 8 tricks, the cost benefit favors the blast (if the 58% of the time we made exactly 8 then inviting would have been better). At least at double dummy. Code is available here.
#18
Posted 2015-January-26, 09:20
#19
Posted 2015-January-26, 10:41
Fluffy, on 2015-January-26, 09:20, said:
Since when is a hand containing A10xx in spades an Aces and Spaces hand?
Not that I pay much attention to that saying, which completely ignores the fact that we can expect partner to hold some cards when he announces 14-16.
I am not the least bit surprised that a simulation shows that bidding is the right action. I appreciate that the simulation plays double-dummy, but remember that it also defends double dummy, and will always make the killing lead if there is one. Defence is the toughest part of the game and on auctions like this one, the lead is often a very difficult choice, where choosing wrong dooms the defenders, while often providing a lot of inferential information to the declarer, not to mention tempo and even an outright trick on occasion.
I wouldn't put an intermediate player in game here, but I'd surely put an expert into it, and an advanced should be given the chance.
#20
Posted 2015-January-26, 11:28
mikeh, on 2015-January-26, 10:41, said:
I am not the least bit surprised that a simulation shows that 2NT and 3NT are very close (as Mbodell notes, it doesn't always matter which we choose - on the actual hand, partner had 16). The value of AKK including ATxx versus the knowledge that we almost surely have no 8-card minor fit are factors that, I believe, are quite hard to weigh against one another.
-- Bertrand Russell