Opps open 4H Sanity check
#21
Posted 2017-May-19, 09:02
Little discussed though is :
1. after 4♥ X is partner allowed to remove the X and bid 4♠ ?
2. what does he need to do that ?
At this point I think the answers might be 1. Yes, 2. At least 5 spades, shortage in hearts, values (with some prospects of slam ?)
#22
Posted 2017-May-19, 11:49
With 6 HCP and 4 card ♠ opposite partner's double might or might not make game. North should reason that if partner has sound values outside ♥, EW are in trouble. North should also reason that partner could be under pressure with values and no clear direction. Taking 5 or 6 tricks on defense might be easier than 10 on offense. North could PASS. I believe North's decision is close to a coin flip. What tips it to pass and defend for me is that both NS have shortness in the SAME suit (North knows this, not South). That suggests declaring will be more difficult than defending.
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Steve Moese
#23
Posted 2017-May-19, 11:59
So was the double on 4h correct. If yes then you will end up in 4♠ doubled if no then you will set 4♥.
The only question remains what the arguments are to double 4h.
Is it a take out double because the will make 4♥, is it a info double to get to game or is it to show you got strong hand and let partner decide to try to set 4♥ or play any other contract ?
For a take out double the hand should as least hold 4-4-3 in the suits outside ♥ so can't be the right action.
For a info double what does partner needs for 4s to be the right contract keeping in mind he/she already passed. If you play 2♠ as weak with a 6 card partners holdings in ♠ could be enough. If 2♠ could be weak with a 5(+) card 4♠ is not likely the best contract.
For a double showing strength the question is if partners should bid 4♠ or is pass to set 4♥ the better option.
I would pass 4♥ because the hand is not suited for (any sort of) double in the given bid situation.
#24
Posted 2017-May-19, 18:10
If we play double of 4h is for penalty, then it depends on when in the round. If early in the round, I probably just pass. Hate to have someone make 4Hx on me early in the round. If late in the round and I need a top board, then I double and hope to find pard with a K that will hold up. I will lead out my aces. If I need an average board, I will just pass.
If imps, just pass.
#25
Posted 2017-May-19, 20:45
There's a reason why the top pros preempt more and higher than the average player. Preempts cause BIG problems, even for world champion class players. This is one of those deals.
It's easy to criticize Xs like this when they don't work. The problem is that pass is even riskier. If you are conservative over preempts and pass hands like this, you will get taken the cleaners day in and day out by high-level openings.
It's also easy to criticize North's bid given all the hands, but I think he has a clear 4S call. You can't pass with a stiff h and let the opponents play at the 4-level with a presumed 11 card fit. Let's give South a more typical double by giving him West's Queen of spades and King of diamonds in exchange for a low heart and the Ace of diamonds. Now East makes 4HX easily.
What is North supposed to do after the X? 4S was normal; if he's fixed, he's fixed.
And what is South supposed to do? 5 of a minor could be much worse.
Sometimes @#$% happens. You have to make the bids most likely to land you on your feet, and I think both N and S did.
Cheers,
Mike
#26
Posted 2017-May-20, 05:11
Secondly, I would never pull the x of 4S. Who says C is better.
Thirdly I don't like the x opposite a passed hand. Simply pass.
#27
Posted 2017-May-20, 08:59
nige1, on 2017-May-18, 11:53, said:
South hand posted to BridgeWinners as a Bidding Poll
.
Thanks for posting this poll, I have to say I'm surprised at the result - maybe I had an unconcious bias in my original answer.
#28
Posted 2017-May-20, 09:36
miamijd, on 2017-May-19, 20:45, said:
There's a reason why the top pros preempt more and higher than the average player. Preempts cause BIG problems, even for world champion class players. This is one of those deals.
It's easy to criticize Xs like this when they don't work. The problem is that pass is even riskier. If you are conservative over preempts and pass hands like this, you will get taken the cleaners day in and day out by high-level openings.
It's also easy to criticize North's bid given all the hands, but I think he has a clear 4S call. You can't pass with a stiff h and let the opponents play at the 4-level with a presumed 11 card fit. Let's give South a more typical double by giving him West's Queen of spades and King of diamonds in exchange for a low heart and the Ace of diamonds. Now East makes 4HX easily.
What is North supposed to do after the X? 4S was normal; if he's fixed, he's fixed.
And what is South supposed to do? 5 of a minor could be much worse.
Sometimes @#$% happens. You have to make the bids most likely to land you on your feet, and I think both N and S did.
Cheers,
Mike
This sounds like an argument that could be made favoring more penalty-orientated doubles of preemptive bids. As the bridge clock spins, styles come and go. Perhaps it is spinning toward a time when this convention may make a return.
#29
Posted 2017-May-20, 19:07
What will you do? Double for penalties? Do you think you can beat 4H? Maybe, maybe not. This could be a double game swing. Even worse is the so called "optional double", often called the "pass the blame double."
#30
Posted 2017-May-20, 20:12
Nabooba, on 2017-May-20, 19:07, said:
What will you do? Double for penalties? Do you think you can beat 4H? Maybe, maybe not. This could be a double game swing. Even worse is the so called "optional double", often called the "pass the blame double."
With that hand you would bid 4S, takeout. No problem. The problem hand you probably meant to use was the natural 4S overcall hand. That is a problem. Fishbein is like any other convention - great when you hold the perfect hand for it - not so useful when you don't.
#31
Posted 2017-May-20, 22:51
Winstonm, on 2017-May-20, 20:12, said:
"With that hand you would bid 4S, takeout."
No I would not and neither would any good player.
#32
Posted 2017-May-21, 06:52
helene_t, on 2017-May-19, 02:16, said:
IMO the only crazy thing that happened at the table is this suggestion. Your partner may be a good player; but some good players aren't good at thinking about a bidding problem from partner's perspective in the post mortem.
#33
Posted 2017-May-21, 07:41
Nabooba, on 2017-May-20, 22:51, said:
No I would not and neither would any good player.
Yes, you would, playing Fishbein.
Quote
Playing Fishbein (which I don't endorse), you would bid 4S over a 4H opening as a takeout - perfect hand would be 4144.
I'm sorry you want to argue about this unrelated point. The issue is that bridge changes. In its earliest days, opening bids were quite loose and made with hands more like today's hands - but consstructive bidding slowly replaced that idea. Later on, too rigid of opening bids created an opening for preemptive bids to mess with opponents' construction. It wasn't until the 60s that Howard Schenken introduced weak 2-bids in the Schenken Club system, a result of losses to the Blue Team's better methods in international play.
Anyway, all I can tell you is that with the turn of the clock back towards weaker and more destructive preempts, it is only natural that pressure will build to use punishing doubles more frequently.