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How often would you balance?


Always, Sometimes, Never  

49 members have voted

  1. 1. Always, Sometimes, Never

    • Always
      26
    • Sometimes
      10
    • Never
      13


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2 for me, and I am well aware of the risks that they may have a nice heart fit.

 

Are the passers aware that we may have 3N our way?

I believe in partners ability to find a bid with a strong or distributional hand in 2nd seat.

So I am quite sure that we won't have 3NT, because if he had the strength needed for that, he should have bid over 1.

I want to be in 3N opposite most balanced 13-14 counts with the K and a spade stopper. Please don't tell me partner would have bid 1N with that...

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2 for me, and I am well aware of the risks that they may have a nice heart fit.

 

Are the passers aware that we may have 3N our way?

Sure. Nothing in life is guaranteed. Will you regret more missing 3NT or the opponents bidding and making 4? Both are unlikely, but real possibilities. You pick your battles. I think the number of hands where we can bid and make 3NT are less likely than the number of hands where we have just helped the opponents improve their strain.

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2 for me, and I am well aware of the risks that they may have a nice heart fit.

 

Are the passers aware that we may have 3N our way?

Sure. Nothing in life is guaranteed. Will you regret more missing 3NT or the opponents bidding and making 4? Both are unlikely, but real possibilities. You pick your battles. I think the number of hands where we can bid and make 3NT are less likely than the number of hands where we have just helped the opponents improve their strain.

20 years ago, I might agree with this. Nowadays with RHO responding on most hands holding a 4 count, the chances of the opponents having a game in hearts is pretty slim.

 

I would go further than what Han says here; the right 10-12 gives us a good shot at 3N, and its eminently biddable if pard has the right hand with club help.

 

I think if you ran a sim; I'd wager its 3:1 to a 3N our way compared to 4 their way.

 

Its also possible we have both B)

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I would go further than what Han says here; the right 10-12 gives us a good shot at 3N, and its eminently biddable if pard has the right hand with club help.

Erm, I didn't post in this thread yet. But you must have read my mind, I voted for "always" a while ago. I'm not as sure as you are that this is right, but I know that I usually bid with hands like this.

 

A simulation would be difficult to do.. the results would depend on the opponent's style (both opening and responding), on partner's overcalling style, and on what partner expects for our balancing bids.

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I would go further than what Han says here; the right 10-12 gives us a good shot at 3N, and its eminently biddable if pard has the right hand with club help.

Erm, I didn't post in this thread yet. But you must have read my mind, I voted for "always" a while ago. I'm not as sure as you are that this is right, but I know that I usually bid with hands like this.

 

A simulation would be difficult to do.. the results would depend on the opponent's style (both opening and responding), on partner's overcalling style, and on what partner expects for our balancing bids.

Yeah; I get you and Arend mixed up B)

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20 years ago, I might agree with this. Nowadays with RHO responding on most hands holding a 4 count, the chances of the opponents having a game in hearts is pretty slim.

 

I would go further than what Han says here; the right 10-12 gives us a good shot at 3N, and its eminently biddable if pard has the right hand with club help.

 

I think if you ran a sim; I'd wager its 3:1 to a 3N our way compared to 4 their way.

 

Its also possible we have both :)

If EW are playing a strong club, RHO may be passing with up to a misfitting 9 count. But I certainly don't assume that's what they're playing (else Roland might have mentioned it).

 

It's also different responding to 1m and 1M in that regards.

 

Regardless, I take that wager any day of the week. 3:1 odds is pretty good.

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[hv=d=w&v=n&n=sj10832hq985dkq2c7&w=sakq96ha1032da93c3&e=shj764d8764ck10982&s=s754hkdj105caqj654]399|300|Scoring: IMP[/hv]

Here is the full layout. One hand doesn't prove anything, but it was horribly wrong to balance with 2. West doubled for take-out and East left it in.

 

It went for 800 (Arend was close) by force when East was able to pitch three diamonds on the top spades. I think declarer was a little unlucky. East chose the right moment to pass 1 (some would perhaps have responded 1NT), but the spotlight would still have been on South.

 

Would she have overcalled 2 anyway? I am convinced that some would have, but we will never know.

 

Roland

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I was one of the ten votes for passing (honest) but I'll restrain myself. My favorite partner and I have an ongoing discussion. He thinks I balance to little, I think he balances too much. The other night he balanced with a double in fourth seat against a weak nt. Not only was I down four, I had to play the damn thing. I am sure he can provide cases when I let us be stolen blind. Pick your poison.
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I want to bid, but then I always want to bid. In this case the question is, I think, can we outbid the opponents? I don't think we can.

 

2 may be right, but thinking about it, it seems to me that too many things can go wrong. So if I''m not bidding too quickly (a fault I still haven't managed to correct) I'm passing.

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I would bid 2C on this hand every single time, without even considering what might go wrong.

 

Having thought about it though, I think the opponents making 4H is a bigger risk than me going for a number in 2C.

 

And I'll still bid 2C.

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