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MP decision


Fluffy

what do you bid?  

34 members have voted

  1. 1. what do you bid?

    • 2 clubs
      26
    • 3 clubs
      1
    • 3 diamonds
      4
    • 3NT
      3


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2.

 

If I were using an unbalanced diamond opening, where a 1 opening promised a stiff, and a 1NT rebid showed that the stiff was in Responder's major, I'd rebid 2.

 

Rebidding 1NT?!? LOL

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This is a clear 2 rebid. Nothing else make sense to me. 1NT is ridiculous, and we're not strong enoug for 3 or 3. Strongly prefer 2 showing 9+ cards in two suits over 2 showing 6+ cards (maybe even only 5+) in one suit.
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2

 

In SEF this has 18 points, so it is the upper limit of a 2 Club bid. The nice points (no unprotected Quacks) makes it better, the stiff in pds hand weaker.

So I have sympathy for 3 CLub as a second choice to the normal 2 Club bid.

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If partner held some kind of supporting heart cards, it would be imperative for him to bid 3N instead of 3S. 3S must be a suggested strain, then, as he didn't bid 4D.

Maybe he has something like: KQJxxx, xxx, Jxx, A

 

I am going to bid 4S, allowing the option of playing there or in 5D. With only Ax, in hearts, 3N surely cannot be right.

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I think partner is cue-bidding his cheapest ace and claiming no clear heart stop with 3. I'm bidding key card, whatever that is in your methods, and, if we have all the key cards, asking partner to bid 7 with 3rd round control of clubs. If partner has one key card, I'm stopping at 5.
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I bid 4 over 3, forcing (3 was game forcing to me). I'm very suit oriented, so if we are supposed to be in 3NT opposite a stiff spade and only the ace in hearts I'm not sure why partner didn't bid it. But I don't want to rush to keycard since there might be a problem in clubs.
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I bid 4 over 3, forcing (3 was game forcing to me). I'm very suit oriented, so if we are supposed to be in 3NT opposite a stiff spade and only the ace in hearts I'm not sure why partner didn't bid it. But I don't want to rush to keycard since there might be a problem in clubs.

JDonn,

 

But to go back to the earlier bidding, partner only bid 3 diamonds, which I take as invitational only in this sequence - surely 3H now is forcing, but only to 3N and NOT to 5D, don't you think?

 

I'm not certain partner would be clear that 4D is meant as forcing here.

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I think partner is cue-bidding his cheapest ace and claiming no clear heart stop with 3.  I'm bidding key card, whatever that is in your methods, and, if we have all the key cards, asking partner to bid 7 with 3rd round control of clubs.  If partner has one key card, I'm stopping at 5.

Again, the earlier bidding is essential - was 3D forcing or non-forcing?

 

If non-forcing, how can 3S bid a slam try?

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I bid 4 over 3, forcing (3 was game forcing to me). I'm very suit oriented, so if we are supposed to be in 3NT opposite a stiff spade and only the ace in hearts I'm not sure why partner didn't bid it. But I don't want to rush to keycard since there might be a problem in clubs.

JDonn,

 

But to go back to the earlier bidding, partner only bid 3 diamonds, which I take as invitational only in this sequence - surely 3H now is forcing, but only to 3N and NOT to 5D, don't you think?

No, not my partners. One of the things I like to establish with partners is that we can not stop in 4 of a minor on a game forcing auction UNLESS there was any interference at any point in the auction. I find this rule is both easy and works well, say for a hand like this where we could have slam but there is nothing good to bid. 5 is possible but doesn't show our strength well.

 

I don't understand why it would be taken as non-forcing. I always considered it a standard rule that if responder makes an invitational bid and opener bids over it, the invitation has been accepted.

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