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X, a support double, if you are playing them. Possibly lho is about to bid several diamonds. I'll be offering a choice by bidding hearts later. Hopefully if, say, lho bids 4D, partner passes, and rho bids 5D, my partner will choose correctly over my 5H. Hopefully there will be a correct choice. The hand has a lot of offense.

 

If you are not playing support doubles, I think 3D is right. There are problems with this call, which is why people play support doubles, but I think it is best.

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I bid 3 :( and my partner passed ...making 5 for a close to bottom board.

 

[hv=n=skq742h2dk7cj9653&s=saj9hakq1095dqck108]133|200|[/hv]

 

1 (p) 1 (2)

3 all pass

 

We dont play support doubles, looks like 3 was my bid

How good is your hand? You have 19 hcp. Ok, you may want to discount the Q, so you have 17 left. But then, you have

- a huge 6-card suit (with T AND 9 this is a good trump suit opposite a singleton)

- very nice 3-card support for your partner, and

- a single in opponents suit.

 

This hand is clearly so good that you should force to game.

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jilly, you've been victim of one of the holes in sayc: inexistance of a bid for hands of type "strong 2".

I don't think Std American is at fault here. JB's hand is good enough to force to game with 3 (although she may have a tough decision to pull to 4) if PD bids 3NT.

 

Also PD's pass of the jump to 3H with 9 HCP is quite weak, IMHO.

 

That being said is SEF or ACOL, then JB opens 2 and game is trivial to find.

 

However, in SA(without Gazzilli) with no interference JB has to "invent" the jump shift to 3 to force game and get more info from PD and perhaps PD raises to 4 and the pair is left guessing as to which game. So in SA the opps 2 actually makes game easier to find with these cards.

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Hi jillybeans2

 

What would a double of the 2D overcall be 'if' you do not play support doubles?(promising 3 card support)

 

I like to play almost all low level doubles as 'card showing' takeout type bids.

 

If the double of 2D overcall would have been penalty, I would bid 3D as a game force.

 

Regards,

Robert

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Interesting observation about the 2D bid potentially assisting in a difficult hand. After 1H-1S-?, with no interference, I think 4H is best. It's a real shame to not show the spades, but as noted, 3C can get the train off it's tracks. The 3C bid forces partner to do something, so very little can be deduced from the raise to 4C except that pard has some clubs. So 4H or 4S is still a guess, and the club bids have muddied the picture.

 

Fortunately opponents can generally be depended upon to help us out.

 

I can see why, as the bidding went, jb's pard passed the 3H. Give jb a likely xx in diamonds and then surely the defense against hearts will begin with a diamond to the AQ. If this is followed by the ace of clubs and then a third diamond, it could get rough even if the hearts are behaving, which they may not be. Perhaps it was timid, but it wasn't thoughtless.

 

Final contract:

At least at imps, and very possibly at mps, 3N is a fine contract. Hearts come home if they are 3-3 and they come in one third of the time when they are 4-2. Nine tricks (5+3+1+0, for example) are virtually certain, there is no danger of ruffs or promotions. Of course that's a very nice stiff Q to go with the Kx, a bit tough to uncover in the auction. Whether 3D would get you to 3N is less certain. I think pard will expect some spades from the 3D bid. It's unlikely that opener would start 1H (instead of 2C) and then choose a 3D call without at least some sort of holding in the spade suit, since pard can hold a six count. 3N would be inspired, but I think I, if jb's partner, would move to a spade game. That's how I have convinced myself, anyway.

 

 

An interesting hand, particularly in the helpfulness of the 2D bid.

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I bid 3 :( and my partner passed ...making 5 for a close to bottom board.

 

[hv=n=skq742h2dk7cj9653&s=saj9hakq1095dqck108]133|200|[/hv]

 

1 (p) 1 (2)

3 all pass

 

We dont play support doubles, looks like 3 was my bid

Hi,

 

Over the 3H bid, which already promises 16-18HCP,

partner should bid 3NT, on power alone.

 

He has the diamond stopper.

 

There is not much difference between 3D and 3H, only

that partner has the option to pass, which he should

not do with his given hand.

 

With kind regards

Marlowe

 

PS: As always, it was partners fault :ph34r:

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jilly, you've been victim of one of the holes in sayc: inexistance of a bid for hands of type "strong 2".

I hate it when people blame the system when it was really a judgement problem.

And I hate it when people fail to understand there's a price to pay for mudding 1-level openings.

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jilly, you've been victim of one of the holes in sayc: inexistance of a bid for hands of type "strong 2".

I hate it when people blame the system when it was really a judgement problem.

And I hate it when people fail to understand there's a price to pay for mudding 1-level openings.

Please tell, what is mudding 1-level openings? :)

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Please tell, what is mudding 1-level openings? ;)

Is to open 1 on as little as

 

x

KQxxx

AQxx

xxx

 

and as much as

 

A

AKJxx

AQJxxx

x

 

or

 

Axx

AKQJxx

AQx

x

 

In other words, it's when an opener can be anything from feather-weight light to a battleship.

 

I can live with light openings, but I strongly disagree with the mainstream view that 1-level openers can occasionally be made on very strong 1 or 2 suited hands.

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whereagles and I seldom agree, but what his sentiment when he said:

"but I strongly disagree with the mainstream view that 1-level openers can occasionally be made on very strong 1 or 2 suited hands"

 

is indeed the quite valid. This is a principle of bidding systems like precison, polish club, Romex, etc. They create an artificial low level bid and stuff a lot of strongish hand (but the lower limit is a lot less than tradiitonal GF 2C) into it. This means, that

 

1H-P-1S-P-3H, and

1H-P-1S-P-3C, both have a much lower upper limit (and are thus better defined) than an tradisional SAYC or 2/1 auction that goes the same way.

 

This, however wasn't your problem on this hand. The 2 overcall gave you the opporunity to make a GAME FORCING 3D rebid with you hand. If partner raises heart go from there, if he rebids spades, go from there. The problem bid would be if RHO did not bid at all. What would you ahve bid if the auction had been

 

1H-P-1S-P-?

 

Three hearts suffers from the same problem you had here. It is strong, it shows a good suit, but it is not forcing. So no doubt some would suggest inventing a club suit and jump rebidding 3C. Now if partener bids 3H (preference.. by the way, I have seen this 3H prefeence bid made on voids by very good players) would 3S be a.) looking for 3NT with diamond stopper, b.) Show 3 card or Hx support for spades, c.) cue-bid for club slam try. This is where muddyness comes into play, primarily because 3 was used to create a force and might not (as in this case) even be a "real suit".

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Three hearts suffers from the same problem you had here. It is strong, it shows a good suit, but it is not forcing. So no doubt some would suggest inventing a club suit and jump rebidding 3C. Now if partener bids 3H (preference.. by the way, I have seen this 3H prefeence bid made on voids by very good players) would 3S be a.) looking for 3NT with diamond stopper, b.) Show 3 card or Hx support for spades, c.) cue-bid for club slam try. This is where muddyness comes into play, primarily because 3 was used to create a force and might not (as in this case) even be a "real suit".

Pretty good description of what the consequences of "muddyness" are. Well said.

 

I do agree that on this particular occasion LHO's 2 bid kinda came to the rescue.

 

By the way, let me just add that in natural systems with strong 2 bids, auctions like

 

1 1

3

 

always show GF 54's or better. 63's are out because that's opened a strong 2. If responder now bids

 

1 1

3 3

 

this is NOT a preference but an honest 3-card support and slammish hand.

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