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whta is your opening bid?


hutchau

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Pass. I have a tremendous playing strength hand that won't get the spade suit shut out and I can limit my hand to start with a pass. If this hand were a heart/club two suiter I would view it as a much harder decision.

 

Winston

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I would like to open 3 (long story, I will not go there now), but his hand has too few controls. I most surely will not pass.

 

Generally with 5-5 or 6-6 I open the higher suit. The one exception is with the black suits, where I often open 1. Here the tremendous difference in the suit quality, however, forces me to open 1. 4 is a reasonable shot, but could easily miss slam.

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<snip>

If you pass, you deserve to hear the bidding continue (1H) p (3S)

<snip>

So what?

 

At least your given seq. is easy: 4H Michaels Cue,

which sureley shows at least 6-5.

 

Of course, they may pass in 2nd seat and partner

may open.

 

I am not claiming pass works best / all the time,

but since I have decide long ago, to pass, if holding

a weak freakish 2-suiter, I will do it now as well,

sometimes it works sometimes not.

 

With kind regards

Marlowe

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It's very hard to get to slam here because it's difficult..

 

1) to know whether pard has the fillers we need

2) to give an accurate pic of our hand to pard

 

I think no amount of constructive bidding is going to extract that info, so 4 is the practical shot and most likely the long term winner.

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It's very hard to get to slam here because it's difficult..

 

1) to know whether pard has the fillers we need

2) to give an accurate pic of our hand to pard

It is even more difficult if you don't introduce clubs !

 

Reason why I prefer to pass with this kind of hands, hoping to show both suits after.

 

The goal is not to know wether partner has the filler we need, the goal is to let partner know if he owns the good cards !

 

Alain

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I'm never buying the auction in clubs, so unless partner has a constructive or destructive raise in spades, I'm in trouble to make game.

 

3 for me.

 

I've had lots of luck opening wild hands like 7-5 in hearts and clubs with a 3-bid. Why shouldnt this extend to a bad 6-6? There's no reason to suppose that my spades are taking tricks in defence (yet), so I may as well tell the main point of my hand.

 

There are a lot of honour cards out there for partner to hold, and a lot of club losers. I'll gamble he has some of the former but not enough to help the latter.

 

If he's got nothing, I force the bad guys to start bidding at the 4-level. I sincerely doubt the auction will die. I might even make another bid (horror of horrors if partner shows some values).

 

I've seen highly successful 3-level preempts by others on a lot more than this. Not my style, but didn't someone say the secret to real 3-level preemption is to vary your bids fairly widely?

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<snip>

I've seen highly successful 3-level preempts by others on a lot more than this. Not my style, but didn't someone say the secret to real 3-level preemption is to vary your bids fairly widely?

<snip>

certainly true, but I doubt that this was meant

for the dealer.

 

With kind regards

Marlowe

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Reason why I prefer to pass with this kind of hands, hoping to show both suits after.

 

The goal is not to know wether partner has the filler we need, the goal is to let partner know if he owns the good cards !

I was claiming the two strategies you can follow (1. look for fillers in pard, or 2. show what you have and let pard make an educated guess) are both likely to fail.

 

You seem to favor strategy 2, but I really don't see whow pass 1st seat is going to help, even if you later on overcall something like 4NT.

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It's very hard to get to slam here because it's difficult..

 

1) to know whether pard has the fillers we need

2) to give an accurate pic of our hand to pard

It is even more difficult if you don't introduce clubs !

 

Reason why I prefer to pass with this kind of hands, hoping to show both suits after.

 

The goal is not to know wether partner has the filler we need, the goal is to let partner know if he owns the good cards !

 

Alain

Lets say you pass, and it goes like 1 p 3, and ok you bid 4 showing spades and a minor. Partner doesn't know which is your minor so he still doesn't know what are 'good cards' or not, so the purported gain didn't even exist. Now that you bid 4 you are going to play 4 anyway the vast majority of the time, but you have accomplished two things along the way by not opening it to begin with:

 

1 - Now the opponents can double you for penalty, where before it was for takeout by current expert practice (of course the takeout double at this high level is usually left in anyway, but someone has to actually hold a takeout double to make one! Though this double used to be for penalty, times have changed and that is out the window.)

 

2 - You have let them find their heart fit, and LHO knows the strength range of RHO. He is extremely likely to do the right thing, whatever that is.

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4 works a lot more than it should.

 

When was the last time you sat as the opening lead with 4 trump and wanted to tap the hand? Or, you lead a high club and Qx comes down with xx. Does it occur to you to give pard an overruff, which caters to a SIX card side suit?

 

Frequently the opponents will xxx and 'know' their partner has some shortness, and take more agressive action.

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1 has the advantage that you may be able to bid a slam (I predict lots of intervention), where 4 has the advantage that it's probably the right spot and you keep opponents from bidding the reds - or you can penalize them.

 

I think 4 is probably the best choice, but I don't like it... I still prefer 1.

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