Balance or not?
#1
Posted 2005-May-08, 17:18
♠ AQ82
♥ QJ102
♦ KJ52
♣ 10
The bidding goes
W N E S
1♦ P 1♥ P
2♣ P 3♣ P
P ?
What do you bid now? If you didn't pass your first two turns, what did you bid?
#2
Posted 2005-May-08, 17:34
PASS
Not sure what form of scoring here, but I surely can't fault passing up to now. Bidding at this point could be suicide. Once in a while opponents will have nine clubs, AND we will have nine spades, but I'm not going to risk -800 to find out. In retrospect, I wish I had overcalled 1♠, but there are plenty of good arguments against that.
#3
Posted 2005-May-08, 17:40
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#4
Posted 2005-May-08, 19:11
I would have overcalled 1S the first time. I like to have a better suit vul, but the hand is pretty good, with the KJ of diamonds well placed.
Peter
#5
Posted 2005-May-08, 19:17
If I were to hold this cards I would have doubled 2♣ which I think is quite logical showing 4-4 in the majors and probably 3-4 diamonds because I passed over 1♦. We can play 2♥, 2♠ or even 2♦ after that.
So I think passing in the 2nd round is wrong and if somebody passed twice acting now is probably caused by a split-personality disorder or something :-)
#6
Posted 2005-May-08, 19:29
After 3C and 2 passes,another pass is not too more.
bridge blog001:
http://cf71632485.spaces.live.com/blog/cns...!1015.entry
bridge blog002:
http://cvl7163cf2485...st-22291-1.html
"You are not thinking. You are merely being logical". - Neils Bohr
#7
Posted 2005-May-08, 19:46
And after pd's 2C bid you do what?
Peter
#8
Posted 2005-May-08, 20:06
bridge blog001:
http://cf71632485.spaces.live.com/blog/cns...!1015.entry
bridge blog002:
http://cvl7163cf2485...st-22291-1.html
"You are not thinking. You are merely being logical". - Neils Bohr
#9
Posted 2005-May-09, 00:57
pbleighton, on May 9 2005, 01:46 AM, said:
And after pd's 2C bid you do what?
You pass. What's the problem?
I would double as well. Better run the slight risk of playing 2C than having to face awkard decisions later.
#11
Posted 2005-May-09, 03:21
cf_John0, on May 9 2005, 01:29 AM, said:
I disagree.
1NT or 1H or 1S are all more plausible distortion of the hand than doubling (and of passing, IMO).
Indeed, my choice would be 1NT, but if I had to overcall a major, I'd prefer the txture of the heart suit.
#12
Posted 2005-May-09, 03:26
#13
Posted 2005-May-09, 04:16
Chamaco, on May 9 2005, 09:21 AM, said:
This is indeed a matter of style, but 1H and 1S are two bids which can really mess up your side's bidding. If you're willing to take that risk, go ahead, but I'd really prefer to bring both majors into the picture instead of muddying the issue
By the way, an interesting possibility is pass, hoping to be able to butt-in later:
1D pass 1H pass
2C
having passed the 1st round, this is the final opportunity to get into the bidding: double. The modern way (Robson/Segal) to play this double is take-out of opener's SECOND suit. You have the perfect hand for this sort of delayed double.
If you pass 2nd round, it's the end. No longer will it be possible to bid anything in reasonable safety.
#14
Posted 2005-May-09, 06:17
Without running a sim, my guess is that the chances of a 2C or 3C response is at least 50%.
Peter
#15
Posted 2005-May-09, 10:51
2. Besides, hearing 3C isn't a problem. That's an invitational hand, so you can correct to 3NT and all is well.
#16
Posted 2005-May-09, 10:58
#17
Posted 2005-May-09, 11:25
luis, on May 8 2005, 08:17 PM, said:
If I were to hold this cards I would have doubled 2♣ which I think is quite logical showing 4-4 in the majors and probably 3-4 diamonds because I passed over 1♦. We can play 2♥, 2♠ or even 2♦ after that.
So I think passing in the 2nd round is wrong and if somebody passed twice acting now is probably caused by a split-personality disorder or something :-)
Agree. Double over 2♣.
#18
Posted 2005-May-09, 12:36
2. Besides, hearing 3C isn't a problem. That's an invitational hand, so you can correct to 3NT and all is well."
1) You are ignoring conditional probability. You are ordering pd to pick between 3 suits. If you were 4-4-1-4, the odds of a club response is somewhat less than 33% (20-25%? - but not 15%), since with equal length in clubs and a major he will pick the major, and with balanced, no 4 card major, and diamond length and a hard stopper he will bid NT. But you aren't 4-4-1-4 - you are singleton in clubs, which makes it more likely that pd will choose clubs.
2) So you are in 3NT with your 13 opposite pd's 9+, with a misfit. Wonderful. And going to 2NT after pd's 2C is REALLY asking for it.
Peter
#19
Posted 2005-May-09, 12:47
whereagles, on May 9 2005, 11:51 AM, said:
2. Besides, hearing 3C isn't a problem. That's an invitational hand, so you can correct to 3NT and all is well.
If my pd dbl with such a hand and "correct" my 3C to 3NT, he wouldn't be my pd anymore.
#20
Posted 2005-May-09, 13:34
pbleighton, on May 9 2005, 06:36 PM, said:
That's a self-serving statement. You have no way to know what I'm thinking.
Anyway, you bid it your way, I bid it my way. This isn't a matter of technique, it's more a matter of style.

Help
