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What does partner's hand look like?


kenrexford

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2/1 GF.

 

You hold AQxxx x KJx QJxx and open 1 in first seat, at IMPs/KO. Your LHO passes, and partner bids 1NT, 99% forcing. Your RHO overscalls a white-v-red 2, passed to partner, who now bids 3.

 

Your system includes the auction 1-P-3, which shows an "invitational" hand with six hearts, meaning roughly a high-end weak 2 opening to a "some might not open it" 1 opening in valuation, anything less than GF.

 

Q1: What does partner have?

Q2: What do you bid?

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3 is still natural. Perhaps he upgraded a hand he was going to bid 2 due to diamond shortness. Perhaps he is 6-4 and wanted to see if you would bid his sidesuit before he bid 3. If it sounds natural, it's natural, unless you are Ken Rexford :lol: Easy pass.
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This is interesting.

 

The debate as to what this bid showed concerned two possible meanings. "If it could be natural, then it is natural" did not solve the problem. The concensus here seems to be that one of the two meanings was clearly correct.

 

The alternative, however, was the majority opinion. That holding was a five-card heart suit and invitational values. To have landing zones, it was felt that Responder should look like a Snapdragon hand, Hx (here known to be Kx) in spades and five hearts. The proposed hand might be something like Kx A109xx xx Axxx.

 

If Opener has this alternative, doubling and conversion often leads to +100, whereas +140 (3), +130 (4), and +600 (3NT) all are fairly good bets. If you pass and Responder has this hand, however, -200 or -300 is fairly likely.

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Hi,

 

Q1: I would guess, that 3H is a fit jump,

assuming that he does not have a way

of showing 5 hearts and a spade fit with

less than gf values direct, so he did

choose 1NT.

The opponents gave him a chance to show

this hand via a the fit bid.

 

Q2: 3S, I wont pass, but my hand did not improve,

so I would go safe, partner can still raise to 4S,

for whatever reason.

 

With kind regards

Marlowe

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The proposed hand might be something like Kx A109xx xx Axxx.

Obviously this depends a bit on opening bid style, but that hand looks like a 2H response to 1S to me.

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The proposed hand might be something like Kx A109xx xx Axxx.

Obviously this depends a bit on opening bid style, but that hand looks like a 2H response to 1S to me.

The system is 2/1 GF.

 

Also, the 1 opening can be frightening.

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This is interesting.

 

The debate as to what this bid showed concerned two possible meanings.  "If it could be natural, then it is natural" did not solve the problem.  The concensus here seems to be that one of the two meanings was clearly correct.

 

The alternative, however, was the majority opinion.  That holding was a five-card heart suit and invitational values.  To have landing zones, it was felt that Responder should look like a Snapdragon hand, Hx (here known to be Kx) in spades and five hearts.  The proposed hand might be something like Kx A109xx xx Axxx. 

 

If Opener has this alternative, doubling and conversion often leads to +100, whereas +140 (3), +130 (4), and +600 (3NT) all are fairly good bets.  If you pass and Responder has this hand, however, -200 or -300 is fairly likely.

This is a perfect take-out double of 2.

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This is interesting.

 

The debate as to what this bid showed concerned two possible meanings.  "If it could be natural, then it is natural" did not solve the problem.  The concensus here seems to be that one of the two meanings was clearly correct.

 

The alternative, however, was the majority opinion.  That holding was a five-card heart suit and invitational values.  To have landing zones, it was felt that Responder should look like a Snapdragon hand, Hx (here known to be Kx) in spades and five hearts.  The proposed hand might be something like Kx A109xx xx Axxx. 

 

If Opener has this alternative, doubling and conversion often leads to +100, whereas +140 (3), +130 (4), and +600 (3NT) all are fairly good bets.  If you pass and Responder has this hand, however, -200 or -300 is fairly likely.

This is a perfect take-out double of 2.

The takeout double option seems good, except it leaves some issues.

 

1. Would opener leave the double in with the actual hand? If he does, the reopen leads to the wrong contract.

 

2. Would opener rebid a 3-card heart suit in response to the double?

 

3. What follow-up for Responder when Opener does bid?

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This is interesting.

 

The debate as to what this bid showed concerned two possible meanings.  "If it could be natural, then it is natural" did not solve the problem.  The concensus here seems to be that one of the two meanings was clearly correct.

 

The alternative, however, was the majority opinion.  That holding was a five-card heart suit and invitational values.  To have landing zones, it was felt that Responder should look like a Snapdragon hand, Hx (here known to be Kx) in spades and five hearts.  The proposed hand might be something like Kx A109xx xx Axxx. 

 

If Opener has this alternative, doubling and conversion often leads to +100, whereas +140 (3), +130 (4), and +600 (3NT) all are fairly good bets.  If you pass and Responder has this hand, however, -200 or -300 is fairly likely.

This is a perfect take-out double of 2.

The takeout double option seems good, except it leaves some issues.

 

1. Would opener leave the double in with the actual hand? If he does, the reopen leads to the wrong contract.

 

2. Would opener rebid a 3-card heart suit in response to the double?

 

3. What follow-up for Responder when Opener does bid?

1. No, not on just 3 diamonds and an easy alternative. It would be a typical matchpoint gamble with the opponents vul to get the magic 200.

2. Sure. Opener usually bids 2 immediately with 4, so he can bid a three card suit rather freely after the double.

3. So opener bids 3. Responder can then choose from 3, 3 or 3 to descripe his hand further.

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2/1 GF.

 

You hold AQxxx x KJx QJxx

and open 1 in first seat, at IMPs/KO.  Your LHO passes, and partner bids 1NT, 99% forcing.  Your RHO overscalls a white-v-red 2, passed to partner, who now bids 3:

 

1S-pa-1N-(2D);pa-pa-3H-??

 

Your system includes the auction 1-P-3, which shows an "invitational" hand with six hearts, meaning roughly a high-end weak 2 opening to a "some might not open it" 1 opening in valuation, anything less than GF.

 

Q1: What does partner have?

Q2: What do you bid?

So

1= A 3card Fit Showing Jump. An invitational hand with 5cH and 3cS: 35??

a= CHO can not have a hand with 6+H and Inv values. That's 1S-3D! here.

b= CHO can not have a min with 6+H. That's a Neg X here.

(...I don't like playing 5-1 "fits", so I am never passing 3H...)

c= CHO can't have an Inv hand with 5+H but no support. That's 2H here.

The only thing that makes sense by process of elimination is a Fit Showing Jump.

 

2= Let's see. I started with a minimum opening, and this auction has

2a= improved my hand?

2b= not changed my hand's value much?

2c= worsened my hand?

 

My vote is "c", so I bid 3S. YMMV.

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This is interesting.

 

The debate as to what this bid showed concerned two possible meanings.  "If it could be natural, then it is natural" did not solve the problem.  The concensus here seems to be that one of the two meanings was clearly correct.

 

The alternative, however, was the majority opinion.  That holding was a five-card heart suit and invitational values.  To have landing zones, it was felt that Responder should look like a Snapdragon hand, Hx (here known to be Kx) in spades and five hearts.  The proposed hand might be something like Kx A109xx xx Axxx. 

 

If Opener has this alternative, doubling and conversion often leads to +100, whereas +140 (3), +130 (4), and +600 (3NT) all are fairly good bets.  If you pass and Responder has this hand, however, -200 or -300 is fairly likely.

This is a perfect take-out double of 2.

The takeout double option seems good, except it leaves some issues.

 

1. Would opener leave the double in with the actual hand? If he does, the reopen leads to the wrong contract.

 

2. Would opener rebid a 3-card heart suit in response to the double?

 

3. What follow-up for Responder when Opener does bid?

This is a perfect take-out double of 2.

 

Agree.

 

 

1. Would opener leave the double in with the actual hand?  If he does, the reopen leads to the wrong contract.

 

I might leave it in. 2 x'd appears pretty juicy.

2. Would opener rebid a 3-card heart suit in response to the double?

 

You actually have to ask if it's right to bid a 3 card suit?

3. What follow-up for Responder when Opener does bid?

 

Over 2, 4

 

Over 2, pass.

 

Over 2N, pass.

 

Over 3, pass.

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