flametree
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About flametree
- Birthday 12/17/1968
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Preferred Systems
Like 2/1, tend to play Acol
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Real Name
Matt
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Gender
Male
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Location
New Zealand
flametree's Achievements
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last one for today
flametree replied to jillybean's topic in Intermediate and Advanced Bridge Discussion
Definitely keep bidding. I'd like to see a poll on what people think of 4S, 4NT, 5C and 5H as possible bids now... -
Most hopeless / clueless comment?
flametree replied to flametree's topic in General Bridge Discussion (not BBO-specific)
Ha ha. Have you been watching me play? -
Decisions, decisions
flametree replied to SimonFa's topic in Intermediate and Advanced Bridge Discussion
Your bidding was fine. Any human partner would bid 5H with north's cards rather than double. -
You're dealer at matchpoints, playing with an intermediate player. ♠ A ♥ 7 ♦ K.8.3 ♣ A.K.Q.T.7.6.5.4 2C is your only ultra-strong opening bid (2D is a weak opening). I'm going to assume that's what we'll start with, but feel free to say if you disagree. What would you bid next : 2♣ - p - 2♦ - p 3♣ - p - 3♥ - p ?? Partner's response 2D denies more than about 9 HCP. Partner would bid 2H directly with a good 5-card suit and could respond 2NT to show a balanced 8-ish points even with a 5-card major. You did not discuss double negative responses, but at the club most players would use a 3NT rebid to show a negative hand here. or 2♣ - [2♠] - p - [3♠] ?? You have not discussed what pass or double would mean over interference.
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Yes, in our club games I'm not sure what crime short of murder at the table would earn anyone a procedural penalty.... The post-hand conversation certainly made it clear what had happened, I was interested in whether I should have called the director after the auction, rather than after the play of the hand. I can just about see how the 3D bidder could say something like "I was control-bidding diamonds, I wanted to hear partner control-bid spades to go to slam - when he failed to do so I bailed in 4H." Though that explanation wouldn't have fitted the cards he held in this instance. PS - I think at my level opposite a reasonable but non-expert partner I'd assume : - a cue-bid here would be a general force, probably asking for a hold or looking for a 5-3 fit in partner's major; - a jump-cue was asking partner to right-side a 3NT contract, probably showing a long minor suit; - a double-jump-cue was a splinter. Though half the room wouldn't know what a splinter was so I wouldn't make one if playing with them...
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Is there no rule about how suits should be arranged? I always thought it was trumps on dummy's right and the rest in rank order. Is that merely common practice rather than required? I echo the "after a great board" sentiments. If playing two boards per table I'm always amazed at the number of rounds that go top-bottom for about a 50% outcome against those opponents. I'm definitely more susceptible to silly plays on the second boards where the first went well. My most recent example followed a nice 800, thanks to a good double by me and excellent defence from partner. The hand had taken a bit long to complete, and so we rushed onto the next. I was still trying to imagine whether we had any play for a slam our way, sorted my cards, noted I was dealer and quickly bid a weak 1NT with 4-3-3-3 shape. Only I actually had 0-3-3-7 shape....
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At a club game against fairly competent opponents, the auction proceeded : 1♣ - 1♦ - 1♥ - pass 3♦ - pass - 3NT* - pass 4♥ - all pass I was the diamond overcaller. The 3NT bid took at least two minutes to hit the table. Before leading my partner asked declarer what 3♦ showed, and was told "I don't know, sorry. I think it means he has diamonds." Dummy tabled three small hearts, and Kx of diamonds. Declarer had no diamond cover, and 4♥ made 10 simple tricks while 3NT played from his hand would have lost the first five tricks (I held AQJxx). Are we right to expect this contract to be changed to 3NT going light? At what point should I have called the director? For what it's worth, with the director busy elsewhere, we then asked the 3♦ bidder what he meant by the bid and got the following conversation. "I wanted him to bid 3NT if he had a diamond stop." "But he did bid 3NT." "Yeah, true." "Would you have passed 3NT if your partner had bid 3NT in 2 seconds rather than 2 minutes?" "Um, probably."
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I don't get that, sorry. South heard partner double a supposedly natural 2C bid, and chose not to leave that double in, believing it was takeout. The only way south would leave the double in is if he/she heard a different explanation from east, in which case the overcall would be artificial and the double would show something in the suit. In which case west would have heard a "correct" explanation, and so could have been entitled to remove the contract to 2H. I don't see how 2C doubled, a contract that simply could never have existed, can be the fair contract. I agree NS are due some rectification, but south shouldn't be rewarded for misreading his/her partner's double, surely?
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Thanks, will remember this when/if we make the move.
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Reverses in Competition
flametree replied to elwood913's topic in Intermediate and Advanced Bridge Discussion
Thanks Frances, I see. Next question - is 3S invitational, and what's the best use for 2H? -
Hi all, I currently dwell in New Zealand but my partner is Canadian, and we are thinking of moving to Ottawa in the next 12 months or so. I was just wondering if anyone from there could tell me about the bridge scene in Ottawa / Ontario. How many clubs, what does it cost, are club nights open to all-comers or streamed based on player quality, ease of getting partners etc? How do tournaments work? I'm a fairly decent club-level player, but thanks to family demands I don't get to play a lot of tournaments. (I speak a bit of French and hope to improve it, so could conceivably play in Gatineau too...) Just as a point of reference, where I'm from we have a couple of not-for-profit clubs, we pay $100 membership annually (about $75 USD/CAD), and $5 per night table money. At my regular club there's a teams night, and one night per week to play duplicate, sorted into four "divisions" based on quality (in theory). Most sessions have 15-20 tables per room, and play around 25 boards. There's an afternoon game open to all as well, plus maybe one social game per week as well. At the club, you need to find your own partner, there's a bar open after the play, and all hands are pre-dealt with hand-records available. The club's website has an excellent record of results and other information. Within three hours drive there's a one-or-two-day tournament maybe every other weekend, and around ten per year within the city I live in. Usually matchpoint pairs, with occasional Swiss or teams. Entry may be restricted by "masterpoint" level. They cost around $25 per day. There's also one major event, the National Congress. This lasts a week with an open 3-day pairs event and an open 3-day teams event, alongside shorter fun, intermediate-level or consolation games. Acol is the standard here for club players, but most of the top players prefer Precision or 2/1 variants. I play 2/1 whenever I get the chance, so that shouldn't be a problem. Learning the alert regulations may be an issue however. Any information much appreciated!
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Reverses in Competition
flametree replied to elwood913's topic in Intermediate and Advanced Bridge Discussion
So if a jump to 2S shows a minumum, what would 1S show? -
Choice after Garbage Stayman
flametree posted a topic in Intermediate and Advanced Bridge Discussion
Oops. Can't change topic subtitle? Should be "5-2 or 4-3"... Auction begins 1NT-2C, 2D-2H. You have 3=2=4=4 shape. Assume partner's 2H guarantees 5x hearts and 4x spades and a very weak hand. Do you play in the 5-2 heart fit or the 4-3 spade fit? Do honour placement or spot values affect the decision? -
Yes I realised that if it began 7-2-?? and I held AT943 and dummy KQ5 then I have an easy "encouraging" signal as there is no point playing a higher card. In which case there isn't a problem. But what if it begins 7-8 or if dummy has KQ8? Now it seems hard for any card to be unequivocably encouraging.
