Butler IMPs scoring. Is this enough to bump it up one more?
Camrose disaster 2 Nice trumps partner...
#1
Posted 2018-October-14, 14:21
Butler IMPs scoring. Is this enough to bump it up one more?
#2
Posted 2018-October-14, 14:47
But the true answer is that it's impossible to answer without knowing partner's style. Some require a monster to double-and-bid with, say, 0=6=3=4; opposite such a partner we should raise.
#3
Posted 2018-October-14, 17:18
#4
Posted 2018-October-14, 21:06
#5
Posted 2018-October-15, 00:00
I haven't a clue what's partner's up to, and what sort of hand he has for X and 5♥ instead of a straightforward overcall/vulnerable pre-empt opposite a passed partner. (I can only assume that it was a State of the Match bid.)
Partner's got lucky and found you with nice trumps, but you have little else. Pass
#6
Posted 2018-October-15, 00:05
ahydra
#7
Posted 2018-October-15, 07:34
Partner was under pressure and probably bid 5♥ as a two-way shot. He is probably hoping that you have a couple of trumps and a "card or two" to give him a shot at 5♥ - whilst expecting that if you have a bust it will be a profitable sacrifice against 4♠.
You have a couple of trumps more than partner might expect, but with no shortage these might not be worth much.
#8
Posted 2018-October-15, 08:00
Tramticket, on 2018-October-15, 07:34, said:
Partner was under pressure and probably bid 5♥ as a two-way shot. He is probably hoping that you have a couple of trumps and a "card or two" to give him a shot at 5♥ - whilst expecting that if you have a bust it will be a profitable sacrifice against 4♠.
You have a couple of trumps more than partner might expect, but with no shortage these might not be worth much.
Mostly agree with this, yes he might have enough for a slam, he might need all you've got to make 5, not your business to guess example void, KQJxxx, Axx(x), AKx(x) only makes 5, add Q♣ and it makes 7 if you have 4 clubs, 6 if 4 diamonds, a 7th heart and 3-3 doesn't change this much.
#9
Posted 2018-October-15, 11:20
#10
Posted 2018-October-16, 13:45
P is almost certainly void in Spades; great, but that means ruffing in the long hand. Not great.
Way too easy to lose two tricks in the minors, in my view.
D.
#13
Posted 2018-October-17, 08:50
Cyberyeti, on 2018-October-17, 06:21, said:
Of course this needs agreement, but as far as I know this is one I have seen mentioned before in bidding discussions, that is differentiating between an immediate 5♥ and the one via 4NT.
Of course even more common might be that 4NT is any two-suiter, where partner assumes minors, but when you correct 5♦ to 5♥ it shows clubs and hearts, in which case you can not use it for the above purpose or you accept there is an ambiguity when partner responds 5♦ to 4NT, when it is either a club-heart two-suiter or a superstrong heart overcall.
Rainer Herrmann
#14
Posted 2018-October-17, 09:25
mikeh, on 2018-October-15, 11:20, said:
Do you think it's at all possible that partner has 6 hearts, i.e. 0=6=(4=3) with KQJ of hearts? He'd be too strong for 2H the first round, but unsuitable for 4H, and didn't want to risk doubling again in the second round (which we'd likely pass).
#15
Posted 2018-October-17, 09:26
rhm, on 2018-October-17, 08:50, said:
Of course even more common might be that 4NT is any two-suiter, where partner assumes minors, but when you correct 5♦ to 5♥ it shows clubs and hearts, in which case you can not use it for the above purpose or you accept there is an ambiguity when partner responds 5♦ to 4NT, when it is either a club-heart two-suiter or a superstrong heart overcall.
Rainer Herrmann
Hi Rainer
I am familiar with the concept of 4N then 5H being stronger than a direct 5H, but I doubt I'd be comfortable using that here, absent discussion. I think that using it here would be an extension beyond where I've seen it before. EG: 1D (4S) 4N
4N is ostensibly 2 places to play (I suspect many players use this as keycard but I think expert standard is takeout), but if responder pulls 5m to 5H, he shows a hand that was too strong to bid 5H.
This works because responder is stuck over the preempt.
In our case, partner had the chance to bid 4H, planning to double 4S, if he has a powerful 1-suiter on which he expects to take 9-10 tricks (with some side cards, not just a 10 card suit), so he doesn't need a way to distinguish between that hand and a better hand in any artificial manner....he doubles then bids 5H with the real monster and bids 4H and doubles with the lesser monster.
Having said that, a true 2-suiter could have used michaels and then taken further action, so I can see the argument that one doesn't need 4N for that, either.
So maybe 4N then 5H is a gradation between true monstrous hands: I'd be ok playing that way, but I'm not ok making my call, at the table, hoping that we are guessing the same way. Experience tells me that the inferences we draw are often coloured by the hands we hold, and partner holds a different hand than do we, so is probably drawing a different inference as to what he is showing.
#16
Posted 2018-October-17, 10:56
The answer to that question may guide you here.
#17
Posted 2018-October-17, 10:58
#18
Posted 2018-October-17, 13:56
♠---
♥KQJxxx
♦Axx(x)
♣AKx(x),
as in Cyberyeti's example, so that 6♥ has almost no play. So what? Here's another "bidding problem":
(Partner could have
♠xx
♥AJT
♦QT9xx
♣AKQ,
in which case 3N would need massive cooperation from opps.)
#19
Posted 2018-October-19, 10:54
nullve, on 2018-October-17, 13:56, said:
(Partner could have
♠xx
♥AJT
♦QT9xx
♣AKQ,
in which case 3N would need massive cooperation from opps.)
WTP,you bid 3 NT, what else? If partner has ♠ ??, they can cash their five or six ♠ and you move on to the next hand. But it's possible they may not find a ♠ lead and/or ♠ block. It also possible partner might have a hand where 9 tricks are always available.
#20
Posted 2018-October-21, 11:45