This one may be easy, playing teams what's your bid? What is going on?
So far, so good so... what?
#1
Posted 2015-February-24, 04:21
This one may be easy, playing teams what's your bid? What is going on?
wyman, on 2012-May-04, 09:48, said:
rbforster, on 2012-May-20, 21:04, said:
My YouTube Channel
#2
Posted 2015-February-24, 04:57
Even though it worked out well here it is a recipe for disasters.
Rainer Herrmann
#3
Posted 2015-February-24, 06:04
Now I bid 4♥, if partner has ♠KJ10xx, xxx, Axx, xx or similar he should realise how good this is.
#4
Posted 2015-February-24, 07:14
#6
Posted 2015-February-24, 07:25
Hanoi5, on 2015-February-24, 04:21, said:
Apparently someone is fooling around. Not my problem, 4♠
-gwnn
#8
Posted 2015-February-24, 12:06
I can always say I had a club mixed in with my spades.
#9
Posted 2015-February-24, 13:27
ArtK78, on 2015-February-24, 12:06, said:
I can always say I had a club mixed in with my spades.
Art, did you read it as a t/o double of 1♥? I don't think any would object. Here I need to tell partner I had 3 diamonds mixed in with my hearts.
#10
Posted 2015-February-24, 14:43
trevahound, on 2015-February-24, 13:27, said:
Yes, I did. Sorry about that.
Now the question becomes whether this hand is too good to overcall 2♣. It is a very good hand. Is it good enough to bid clubs over a heart bid at any level made by partner? This is a close choice.
I would not be overly upset a a partner who made the judgment that this hand is too good for a 2♣ overcall. In any event, the auction has worked out very nicely. I would still just bid 4♠.
#11
Posted 2015-February-25, 04:25
Given that we only have 4 spades, I would have gone with 2C.
The strength is ok for a power double, but if they are silent
and partner bids spades, we can never be sure, we have more
than a 43.
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#12
Posted 2015-February-25, 09:11
P_Marlowe, on 2015-February-25, 04:25, said:
Given that we only have 4 spades, I would have gone with 2C.
The strength is ok for a power double, but if they are silent
and partner bids spades, we can never be sure, we have more
than a 43.
I assume you meant that we only have 3 spades.
Playing a 4-3 fit is not the end of the world. This hand may play well in a 4-3 spade fit if partner has a good 4-card spade holding.
#13
Posted 2015-February-25, 10:54
ArtK78, on 2015-February-25, 09:11, said:
Playing a 4-3 fit is not the end of the world. This hand may play well in a 4-3 spade fit if partner has a good 4-card spade holding.
Yes, the 4-3 is not the issue, and we dont have a problem, if partner
showes some strength, as in the given seq., when he freely did bid 2S.
The problem comes, if he responds 1S, opponents remain silent.
Do we raise, and if we raise, how high, or do we show our 5 carder.
Ending up in a 4-3 at the game level is ok, ending up at the 3 level
in a 4-3, when partner is broke, may not.
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#14
Posted 2015-February-25, 15:13
#15
Posted 2015-February-26, 14:09
Now I'd bid 4♥ and then subside in 4♠. We might miss a slam, but it looks dangerous to drive the five-level - the opponents are likely to have some shape to justify their bidding, so there could well be a diamond ruff.
This post has been edited by gnasher: 2015-February-26, 14:19
#16
Posted 2015-February-27, 04:15
gnasher, on 2015-February-26, 14:09, said:
That may depend where you live.
But I doubt that many in the Bridge World would double.
I feel uncomfortable when my partner makes a takeout double and I can not even rely on that he will have tolerance for my unbid major.
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Now there are certainly rare hands, which are so strong you might have to double anyway.
However, I feel this hand does not qualify. You rightly claim it does not look like a 1NT overcall, but a 1NT overcall certainly promises less in an unbid major than a takeout double.
Not that I recommend a 1NT overcall.
Is it really so terrible passing a strong but not super-strong unbalanced hand with length in the suit opened by RHO?
Rainer Herrmann
#17
Posted 2015-February-27, 11:00
There are hands on which I would double even lacking tolerance for an unbid major, but they don't looknlike this one.
Partner is allowed to bid some large number of hearts, and should do so with shape, even without hcp. Thus my hand should offer play in 4♥ should he choose to make that call or should have a suit that I can bid. Neither exists here, altho this hand might be ok in hearts on a good day...but might be terrible.
If we can't stomach 1N, and I understand why, and we can't stomach 2♣, we arrive at that most under-appreciated call in bridge: pass.
Having got away with the double, or so it seems to me, I am going to tighten the noose I tried to place around partner's neck and bid 4♠. I just hope that he didn't have the misfortune to be dealt a 4 card suit Bear in mind that when he bid 2♠, he wasn't expecting this shape to appear in dummy.
#18
Posted 2015-February-27, 12:57
mikeh, on 2015-February-27, 11:00, said:
There are hands on which I would double even lacking tolerance for an unbid major, but they don't looknlike this one.
Partner is allowed to bid some large number of hearts, and should do so with shape, even without hcp. Thus my hand should offer play in 4♥ should he choose to make that call or should have a suit that I can bid. Neither exists here, altho this hand might be ok in hearts on a good day...but might be terrible.
How likely is it that a passed hand will be able to jump to 4♥, on a hand where we belong in some other game? I'm not saying it's impossible, but it seems a very low risk.
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I don't like pass because it's quite likely to lead to an awkward guess later. For example, what will you do if it goes
And there's also the risk of defending 1♦ when 3NT is cold.
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Partner can't have only four spades. With four spades and invitational values he would bid 2♦, taking advantage of the fact that he's a passed hand.
This post has been edited by gnasher: 2015-February-27, 12:58
#19
Posted 2015-March-01, 00:19