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JLOL

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Can partner use 4NT followed by 5H to show a weak hand, or is that likely to be a disaster?

No this shows a great 5 overcall.

 

I take the push. If its wrong, I explain how I was doubling when it came around to me and would pass when pard bid 5.

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I don't raise. Close though. I mean the singleton spade and all these queens make the hand look nicer than it really is IMO, and it's also true partner showed the worse of two possible 5 overcalls (I used to not like playing 4NT then 5 as that but Justin convinced me once).
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Can partner use 4NT followed by 5H to show a weak hand, or is that likely to be a disaster?

No this shows a great 5 overcall.

 

I take the push. If its wrong, I explain how I was doubling when it came around to me and would pass when pard bid 5.

haha, so you raise, but if you are wrong, you tell partner it is his fault? B)

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This depends greatly on the form of scoring to me because at MPs I'd almost certainly pass with most of the people I play with. 5 making 6 will not be a zero.

 

At IMPs I am not sure. I might have to ruff a spade for partner and now if he/she doesn't have the J I'm in trouble because you need to guess whether to hook 1st round. Is it possible that partner is missing 2 aces? Of course. It would be difficult for him to have a hand that would bid 4N...5 and if he did do that I'd be worried about grand so that argument doesn't mean too much to me as far as whether to bid here or not. If I do bid 6 is enough, don't need 5NT.

 

I bid. I expect to make this more often than not.

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I had thought the 4NT-->5H was normally a route to show a good raise to 5H when both opponents have bid (something like 3S-X-4S-4NT-blah-5H).

This direct 4NT over 4S to show a good 5H hand is new to me. If partner bids 5D as p/c, doesn't 5H show the round suits or am I missing something?

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If you use 4S - 4NT - (something) - 5H to show a good 5H overcall, what do you do on a 1516 type hand? I use a 4NT overcall to show any two suits, and I thought everyone else did too...

 

(4S - 4NT - P - 5C - P - 5H certainly shows extras, but it's not obvious to me that it shows a single suiter)

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If you use 4S - 4NT - (something) - 5H to show a good 5H overcall, what do you do on a 1516 type hand? I use a 4NT overcall to show any two suits, and I thought everyone else did too...

 

(4S - 4NT - P - 5C - P - 5H certainly shows extras, but it's not obvious to me that it shows a single suiter)

I'd say it shows a big hand forcing to slam in H or a minor.

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If you use 4S - 4NT - (something) - 5H to show a good 5H overcall, what do you do on a 1516 type hand?  I use a 4NT overcall to show any two suits, and I thought everyone else did too...

 

(4S - 4NT - P - 5C - P - 5H certainly shows extras, but it's not obvious to me that it shows a single suiter)

No meaning is obvious unless you have an agreement about it.

 

The idea is that 4NT-5;5 is a one-suited slam try, but 4NT-5;5 is ambiguous. In the latter case advancer assumes hearts and clubs, and the 4NT bidder doesn't get to show his slam try. As he wouldn't have been able to show a slam try by bidding 5 directly, the argument is that he's no worse off than he would have been.

 

There are plenty of other ways to show a slam-forcing two-suiter, so the sequence 4NT-5;5 isn't really needed for anything else.

 

The main disadvantage of this approach is that advancer may misjudge over further competition. Also, he can't drive slam because he knows of a good fit in one of the minors.

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If next hand bids 5, you are in trouble, if 4NT is a two-way bid. But it is not likely.

Why isn't it likely?

Depends what "likely" means.

I prefer 4Nt to be an unambigous two-suiter, because of the "few" times next hand raises.

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The fear of partner bidding 5 and not knowing that you are good with hearts as opposed to hearts and clubs is unfounded (Jlall taught me!). You can just bid 5 anyway since partner already said he prefers hearts to clubs, or you can use the info of that preference to bid 6 instead, but in either case you are no worse off.

 

The fear of next hand bidding 5 is a bit more relevant, but either you can guess to bid 6 which presumably your hand is not far short of anyway, or you can double and most likely defend 5x which should generally turn out ok.

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