helene_t Posted March 28, 2008 Report Share Posted March 28, 2008 Larry Cohen writes in "To bid or not to bid" that you should try to avoid doubling with a void at high levels. Not sure if this counts as high level. Anyway, there will sometimes be no alternative, such as this hand. "Never" is simply ridiculous (and more so than so many other "never" rules). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jdonn Posted March 28, 2008 Report Share Posted March 28, 2008 Larry Cohen writes in "To bid or not to bid" that you should try to avoid doubling with a void at high levels. Not sure if this counts as high level. Anyway, there will sometimes be no alternative, such as this hand. "Never" is simply ridiculous (and more so than so many other "never" rules). He does, but when you have takeout double shape and values what choice is there? This advice to 'not double with a void' seems like nothing more to me than 'try your best not to be holding a void in your hand'. To me doubling with a void is less common than with a singleton only in the sense that I hold fewer voids than singletons. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Cascade Posted March 28, 2008 Report Share Posted March 28, 2008 Larry Cohen writes in "To bid or not to bid" that you should try to avoid doubling with a void at high levels. Not sure if this counts as high level. Anyway, there will sometimes be no alternative, such as this hand. "Never" is simply ridiculous (and more so than so many other "never" rules). He does, but when you have takeout double shape and values what choice is there? This advice to 'not double with a void' seems like nothing more to me than 'try your best not to be holding a void in your hand'. To me doubling with a void is less common than with a singleton only in the sense that I hold fewer voids than singletons. Exactly - "they don't always deal me the perfect text-book hand". Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Halo Posted March 28, 2008 Report Share Posted March 28, 2008 Be good to have the hand. I know it doesn't mean much, but personally I always like to see if I was wrong/wrong or wrong/right (right/right is of course not available on this vote!). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dcvetkov Posted March 28, 2008 Report Share Posted March 28, 2008 Larry Cohen writes in "To bid or not to bid" that you should try to avoid doubling with a void at high levels. Not sure if this counts as high level. Anyway, there will sometimes be no alternative, such as this hand. "Never" is simply ridiculous (and more so than so many other "never" rules). He does, but when you have takeout double shape and values what choice is there? This advice to 'not double with a void' seems like nothing more to me than 'try your best not to be holding a void in your hand'. To me doubling with a void is less common than with a singleton only in the sense that I hold fewer voids than singletons. I really liked this post;) Josh It sounds like this is one of those bids " Double and hope for the best"..but still it should do us more good then harm on the long run. You may have to accept occasional disaster, just like occasional -530 or simular in your column;).You are still alive and playing bridge, arent you? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TimG Posted March 29, 2008 Report Share Posted March 29, 2008 In Competitive Bidding in the 21st Century, Marshall Miles has a short section on "'Negative' Doubles at Higher Levels" in which he advocates for a pass after 1♦-3♥-DBL-P holding ♠A63 ♥AT54 ♦AT83 ♣63. He goes further and says that he would pass with ♠A63 ♥QJ9 ♦AJ42 ♣J63 (though he admits he is likely in the minority here). He cites a bidding problem from Bridge magazine where pass was the top vote getter after P-P-1♠-3♣; DBL-P holding ♠KJ973 ♥A96 ♦AQ4 ♣52. The two panelist comments that he cites are Barry Rigal's "Pass. Negative doubles should be passed with balanced hands. I hope we can beat it, but guessing which red suit to bid is a fairly arid and unrewarding pastime." and Karen McCallum's "Pass. Partner has a good balanced or semi-balanced hand. Three clubs doubles may be our last plus score. This is a much easier decision if your agreements regarding negative doubles mandate balanced flexible hands, no two-suiters, and absolutely never contain a singleton in the opponents' suit (above the one-level)." Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jdonn Posted March 29, 2008 Report Share Posted March 29, 2008 In Competitive Bidding in the 21st Century, Marshall Miles has a short section on "'Negative' Doubles at Higher Levels" in which he advocates for a pass after 1♦-3♥-DBL-P holding ♠A63 ♥AT54 ♦AT83 ♣63. He goes further and says that he would pass with ♠A63 ♥QJ9 ♦AJ42 ♣J63 (though he admits he is likely in the minority here). He cites a bidding problem from Bridge magazine where pass was the top vote getter after P-P-1♠-3♣; DBL-P holding ♠KJ973 ♥A96 ♦AQ4 ♣52. The two panelist comments that he cites are Barry Rigal's "Pass. Negative doubles should be passed with balanced hands. I hope we can beat it, but guessing which red suit to bid is a fairly arid and unrewarding pastime." and Karen McCallum's "Pass. Partner has a good balanced or semi-balanced hand. Three clubs doubles may be our last plus score. This is a much easier decision if your agreements regarding negative doubles mandate balanced flexible hands, no two-suiters, and absolutely never contain a singleton in the opponents' suit (above the one-level)." I was his partner for several years. Even ignoring the fact he is eccentric, he plays the negative double differently than standard. For him it just shows a balanced hand and has no strong implication of 4 in the other major, he wouldn't double in a million years on the hand in the thread. Also those passes are on the 3 level. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TimG Posted March 29, 2008 Report Share Posted March 29, 2008 I didn't mean to suggest the treatment was standard, just citing one expert viewpoint for consideration. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Finch Posted March 31, 2008 Author Report Share Posted March 31, 2008 Funny that this thread generates 3 pages of replies when the vast majority thinks it's obvious to double. At the table I bid 3H, worried (i) about defending 2Hx, (ii) about getting to a cold 6C contract, but although my partner didn't object I've been convinced that was a bit of a silly call (you are strong enough to bid 4C or 5C next round if LHO raises hearts). There is no right "at the table" answer here, by the way. Double gets you to 4S going off, 3H gets you to 3NT going off. It's not actually clear single dummy which is the better spot. The winning action is for you to double and partner to pass and you to nip 2Hx one off, but that isn't going to happen. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
han Posted March 31, 2008 Report Share Posted March 31, 2008 So partner actually didn't have a hand suitable to convert but still 2HX was the top spot. I think the lesson is that with two aces you shouldn't be afraid to double with a void. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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