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bluenikki

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Everything posted by bluenikki

  1. Easley Blackwood had a theory that if the declaring side had a singleton, the defending side was likely to have one. Mainly this was applied to 9-card fits. He claimed that he had researched all published world championship deals. When computer dealing was in effect, the rule failed. But he claimed that when manual dealing was employed,it worked. Carl
  2. Recently, Chat Manager has lost the ability to scroll. This makes it useless. I've tried both Chrome and Safari. Possibly related: The window size can no longer be adjusted. Am I alone in this? Carl
  3. and with less: [hv=pc=n&s=sxhak6432dj2ca432&d=s&v=0&b=11&a=1hp1sp]133|200[/hv] If responder is forced to reply 2♥ with ♥ void, you better not rebid 2♣ with this! Carl
  4. What do opener's continuations mean after 1♥ - 1♠ 2♣ - 3♣ ?
  5. There is no law of nature that says the 4-4 major must out-score 1NT. For one thing, the opponents may break the suit for you. Carl
  6. Seems to me the important question is not how bad the overcall might be but how good. If advancer is under pressure to keep the bidding open, there must be a variety of bids that do not suggest strength.
  7. CCCC of 9.25 (Kaplan hated two-honors-doubleton)
  8. Addendum to question: Would the answer be different if the spades were 65432 ?
  9. Not an offer, but a request for clarification. "Low" should always be lowest. "High" should always be the highest you think you can afford. You certainly do not want to play following with or discarding the queen to be discouraging. What about the ten?
  10. As this deal shows, there is a desperate need for a separate bid to show 18-19, 4-card support with no top honor, with an un-agree reply. There is no excuse for a bidding system that lands you in a suit contract on this deal. Any suit. By the way, how can this responding hand even think of asking keycards? Carl
  11. As Marshall Miles said in a long-ago article by Eddie Kantar: "It's OK to have undefined auctions. For example, we have never assigned a meaning to 1♦ - 1NT ; 7♠ ." Carl
  12. Doesn't 5=0=4=4 bid 2♦ at second turn? 2♣ loses the diamond suit unconditionally. Carl
  13. "Non-forcing" has many possible meanings. The most useful (in my opinion) for competitive auctions is that partner passes only with BOTH minimum strength AND a misfit for the suit. If that is the meaning, Jxxxx is suicidal. Carl
  14. There are really only two questions: If I will need to encourage with Heee, what will I do. If I will need to discourage with Oooo, what will I do? In most auctions, there is ample time to decide these, other than when it is your turn to call. Note I do not say you have to find the best possible action. Carl
  15. "I play odd/even in one partnership, and that method definitely creates issues. What if one has only odd cards in suits one doesn’t want led, and only even in the one you want played?" But when you first see your hand, such problem suits are known. So you should be planning throughout the auction what least-of-evils work-around you will use. Carl
  16. Of course it is a game force. But it is not a game-forcing *raise*. There is no reason to commit the partnership to a strain in the first round. Carl
  17. "old fashioned texts (and for all I know, even current texts) say one needs 6 points to respond" In old Goren, you MUST respond with 6 points INCLUDING DISTRIBUTION. So most 5 hcp hands were no-choice responses. Carl
  18. All too often, NO ONE becomes host for several hands. So persistently slow players can't be ejected. Carl
  19. Are the opponents astute enough to lead a trump? If not, you'll make surprisingly often. Besides, that's what you budget for when you double with that shape.
  20. That's why 1NT was an overbid. But having bid it, it would be bizarre not to show your ♠ stops here. Carl
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