What does this show ?
#1
Posted 2022-May-22, 14:15
2♦-P-P-2N
Your agreements.
Double of 2♣ would simply show clubs, one 2 or 3 suited.
2N over 2♣ would show a 2 suiter without clubs
Obviously you can also bid suits naturally
#2
Posted 2022-May-22, 14:26
I can't see this happening if it were a strong no trump and I don't have any agreements. I guess it probably shows a desire to go negative.
#3
Posted 2022-May-22, 14:31
I’m assuming a strong 1N: I have different agreements over the 2C bid if it were a weak notrump.
rHO presumably has something resembling 4441. LHO has no major. Why on earth would we be bidding here? What kind of hand thinks that a likely misfit layout belongs to us at the 3-level?
I briefly considered ‘natural’, something along the lines of about 19-20 hcp with 5+ clubs, but I still can’t bring myself to enter the auction. No doubt I’ll learn something when we are told what the 2N bidder held.
Added: the form of scoring may be relevant. I’d be more likely to bid 2N with my suggested 19-20 with clubs if playing matchpoints.
Edit: if 1N were weak, I’d never play double of 2C as anything other than ‘cards’. Using it to show clubs is, imo, inefficient.
#4
Posted 2022-May-22, 15:10
#5
Posted 2022-May-22, 15:25
mikeh, on 2022-May-22, 14:31, said:
Im assuming a strong 1N: I have different agreements over the 2C bid if it were a weak notrump.
rHO presumably has something resembling 4441. LHO has no major. Why on earth would we be bidding here? What kind of hand thinks that a likely misfit layout belongs to us at the 3-level?
I briefly considered natural, something along the lines of about 19-20 hcp with 5+ clubs, but I still cant bring myself to enter the auction. No doubt Ill learn something when we are told what the 2N bidder held.
Added: the form of scoring may be relevant. Id be more likely to bid 2N with my suggested 19-20 with clubs if playing matchpoints.
Edit: if 1N were weak, Id never play double of 2C as anything other than cards. Using it to show clubs is, imo, inefficient.
Weak no trump
#8
Posted 2022-May-22, 15:48
Cyberyeti, on 2022-May-22, 15:27, said:
If forced to fill in for a player who took ill and forced to play partners methods, and this was a weak notrump, then I suppose I have a strong 2N bid. But Id never willingly play these methods. Double of 2C as basically a strong notrump (or better) is imo (and those of every really good pair against whom Ive played where it came up I have played a lot of weak 1N) far more useful than I have clubs. When one has clubs, that slightly increases the already likely odds that opener has a major and were likely outgunned in terms of buying the contract, and the lead value is diminished against a suit contract rather than notrump.
#9
Posted 2022-May-23, 00:15
mikeh, on 2022-May-22, 15:48, said:
In club bridge, the strong NT+ is surprisingly uncommon here.
The issue is that you look at your 12-13 with 5 clubs and have to stick your neck out at the 3 level in an opps auction of 1N-2♣-2♥ passed round to you into a potential 24 count for the opps or pass out where you can make 3N opposite partner's flat 13. Instead you can just double and let partner take it from there.
It's swings and roundabouts and I don't know what's more frequent and/or useful.
#12
Posted 2022-May-23, 01:23
#13
Posted 2022-May-23, 01:29
Cyberyeti, on 2022-May-23, 00:15, said:
The issue is that you look at your 12-13 with 5 clubs and have to stick your neck out at the 3 level in an opps auction of 1N-2♣-2♥ passed round to you into a potential 24 count for the opps or pass out where you can make 3N opposite partner's flat 13. Instead you can just double and let partner take it from there.
It's swings and roundabouts and I don't know what's more frequent and/or useful.
Club players do not play fourth seat doubles of a weak no trump as strong because they have no idea what subsequent doubles mean or how to handle such auctions: this is why a double shows the suit.
Weak no trumpers always remember the games you miss when they hold two balanced hands and let you play one no trump down a few: they don't remember the larger penalties when they double Stayman because it only happens in a stronger field.
#16
Posted 2022-May-23, 02:22
I'd like to add that my partner requested that a double of their Stayman shows points, not clubs, even over their strong notrump. As mikeh said, clubs just don't win the auction.
#17
Posted 2022-May-23, 02:44
DavidKok, on 2022-May-23, 02:22, said:
I'd like to add that my partner requested that a double of their Stayman shows points, not clubs, even over their strong notrump. As mikeh said, clubs just don't win the auction.
In second seat, you make a penalty double, this is only an issue in 4th seat. Partner said he would have doubled 2♣ anyway (I was big and balanced with ♣Axxx with x being very small)
#18
Posted 2022-May-23, 04:30
DavidKok, on 2022-May-23, 02:22, said:
I'd like to add that my partner requested that a double of their Stayman shows points, not clubs, even over their strong notrump. As mikeh said, clubs just don't win the auction.
I thought it was more about lead directing than winning the auction.
#19
Posted 2022-May-23, 05:44
AL78, on 2022-May-23, 04:30, said:
Over (1NT)-P-(2♣*)-? on the other hand, the hand might belong to either side, competing at the 3-level (or even the 2-level over their possible diamond or heart fit) is a live possibility. Double partscore swings do add up at 6 IMPs at a time. Also lead-directing doubles are always a parlay bet of sorts - the lead has to set their contract, the lead partner would naturally have made has to not set their contract, and the opponents have to be foolhardy enough to bid on anyway before you show a good profit. Of course you also profit if a lead-directing double keeps them out of a game (especially if it would have made), but not only is this rare, my partner tends to find the killing leads on these auctions even without the double. So the average IMPs (or matchpoints, for that matter) swung with lead-directing doubles is low. I think assigning a different meaning to doubles in many situations like this is helpful.
In fact, the case is even stronger than I presented above. As mikeh pointed out if we have a hand suitable for clubs the chance is greater that the opponents belong in a suit contract and that our clubs won't take that many tricks. The double gives the opponents extra bidding space to explore this (I play: a bid by opener shows a club stopper and the meaning as if we were not interrupted, redouble is for blood and pass denies a club stopper, responder can repeat the Stayman ask with a redouble). Both of these are much less of a concern if double shows values/cards, and doubler's partner is likely to pull it.