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Is this double anything in particular?


matmat

You participate in the auction given below, what is the double?  

29 members have voted

  1. 1. You participate in the auction given below, what is the double?

    • Nothing in particular, p thought auction was funny, straight penalty
      15
    • Nothing in particular, p is not sober.
      1
    • Asks for a heart lead
      5
    • Forbids a heart lead
      2
    • Asks for a club lead
      5
    • Forbids a club lead
      0
    • Asks for a spade lead
      1


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Partner thinks it is going off. He should have something in diamonds. I would expect to look at my hand before deciding whether to lead a heart or a club, but I wouldn't consider any other suit.
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I think that in auctions like this, partner's double means they are going off. Make your normal lead.

 

Prefer a lead to a lead because I think pard will be expecting a lead on this auction and may be doubling on a single stopper and a filler needed to knock out declarer's stopper. Unless your suit is anemic, in which case maybe try a instead.

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thanks for the replies thus far.

 

now, after the auction is over, you look at your hand and see:

 

KJxx AT9xxx Kx x

 

does this make the lead any easier?

 

 

Now, forget the first part of that post.

 

P actually held

9xxx 8x x AKQxxx

do you agree with their actions.

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BAM, all white

 

Auction:

 

1 - ( x ) - 2 - (2)

2 - (3) - 3 - (3NT)

P - ( P ) - X - all pass

IMO

  • Doubles of games and slams, voluntarily bid by opponents, should be vaguely Lightner -- lead-directing rather than pure penalty.
  • Simple rules are best: e.g. if we've both bid a suit, then lead your suit not mine.
  • Hence, without other agreements or indications, this should ask for a lead.

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1 - ( x ) - 2 - (2)

2 - (3) - P - (3NT)

P - ( P ) - X - all pass

Wouldn't you be inclined to lead a club here, even with a singleton if your hearts were not great? So, I think responder on the actual hand made an error with his 3 bid (and probably his double, even if he had passed 3, unless there is a 10 missing from his actual hand).

 

With opener's actual hand, looking at the K, you have to wonder what is going on, don't you? One explanation is that partner has solid clubs. Certainly advancer has a heart stopper, but he may reasonably have been counting on the takeout doubler to have a club stopper. If one of our suits is running, it is most likely clubs.

 

Conflicting signal, I think. At the table, I probably would have led a heart, but with time to think deeper a club is probably best. One extra thing that a club has going for it is that responder might have the A and be able to switch to hearts at trick two when clubs is the wrong suit. Leading a heart is likely an all or nothing shot (when it matters).

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