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What is the good bidding ?


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North should certainly make a neg.,

he has the classic 4-4-4-1 shape, and

11HCP, any other bid is out.

 

Now South will have a problem, but

most likely East will raise 3S to 4S,

which South can pass.

If East passes as well, ... well I may

Pass with the South hand, not a success.

 

With kind regards

Marlowe

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Interesting hand and problem. I would in practice probably end up in 5C down one, or even a horrible 4H contract. But...

 

A double of 3 is a pressure bid. It shows values without any options, and it might be based upon a number of hands, sometimes without four hearts. If Opener respects that problem, he should strain to bid 3NT. Qx provides a bolster for 3NT, but it is a horrible feature for any other contract. Thus 3NT seems plausible.

 

If Responder respects the problem also, he may very well justify removal of a 3NT call to the assured club fit, at 4. This should not be forcing. Although 4 is probably set, it has hope. Give Ax or Kx to the 3 bidder, and 4 will often score up 130 in practice.

 

[On this last point. Assume a spade lead and no heart switch. You lose a spade, of course, and then ruff out the last spade, pull trumps, and strip diamonds, in the right order to end up on dummy. A small heart is played from both hands. If Declarer's LHO holds Ax or Kx, there is no resolution to the problem when trumps were 2-2.]

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Interesting hand and problem. I would in practice probably end up in 5C down one, or even a horrible 4H contract. But...

 

A double of 3 is a pressure bid. It shows values without any options, and it might be based upon a number of hands, sometimes without four hearts. If Opener respects that problem, he should strain to bid 3NT. Qx provides a bolster for 3NT, but it is a horrible feature for any other contract. Thus 3NT seems plausible.

 

If Responder respects the problem also, he may very well justify removal of a 3NT call to the assured club fit, at 4. This should not be forcing. Although 4 is probably set, it has hope. Give Ax or Kx to the 3 bidder, and 4 will often score up 130 in practice.

 

[On this last point. Assume a spade lead and no heart switch. You lose a spade, of course, and then ruff out the last spade, pull trumps, and strip diamonds, in the right order to end up on dummy. A small heart is played from both hands. If Declarer's LHO holds Ax or Kx, there is no resolution to the problem when trumps were 2-2.]

To bid 3 NT with the south hand is a possible gamble.

But it surely is impossible to bid 4 nonforcing from North after this.

Pd wants to play 3 NT opposite mine 1444 hand with about 10 HCPS? Now I have a 1444 hand with 11 HCPS and should correct 3 NT to 4 Club? Silly idea ihmo...

 

But at this actual hand, I had have an even worse result then the rest, because I had passed 3 Spade X or bid 3 NT. Both had been nice for the opponents. :lol:

But I had disliked to rebid my 5 card minor and I had no good other bid avaiable and believe in the statement, that it is winning bridge to pass quite often with a balanced hand opposite a take out double with no clear fit. Obviously this is no winning bridge in this hand.

 

sh

 

It happens

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The bidding should proceed with a double followed by 4 from opener. Then responder has to decide between a cautious pass and an aggressive raise.

 

Maybe the pass is right playing strong NT (where the example hand is a lively possibility) and 5 is right playing a Weak NT (where opener will have either more strength or more distribution than the actual hand). But maybe my judhgement is being affected by seeing both hands.

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The bidding should proceed with a double followed by 4 from opener. Then responder has to decide between a cautious pass and an aggressive raise.

 

Maybe the pass is right playing strong NT (where the example hand is a lively possibility) and 5 is right playing a Weak NT (where opener will have either more strength or more distribution than the actual hand). But maybe my judhgement is being affected by seeing both hands.

I agree with this analysis. I don't care for 3nt on Qx--partner would be straining to bid 3NT himself with a spade card, so likely he doesn't have one.

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I like and agree with EricK's analysis.

 

Often when they preempt, you end up guessing, and if you guess wrong, there's a bad result. This is just bridge. Of course, sometimes they get a bad result for preempting.

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