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Every rebid feels wrong


you rebid  

46 members have voted

  1. 1. you rebid

    • 1 Spade
      0
    • 1 No Trump
      0
    • 2 Clubs
      3
    • 2 No Trump
      0
    • 3 Clubs
      31
    • 3 No Trump
      11
    • Another unlisted choice, which I will explain below
      1


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[hv=d=s&v=n&s=st92ha3d3cakq9843]133|100|Scoring: IMP

Uncontested auction

1-1;

?[/hv]

 

Sorry if this is a WTP, but I'd like to hear thoughts on this.

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Hi,

 

I have a single suiter, I show it.

 

#1 That rules out 1S, 1NT, 2NT.

#2 For 3NT I am missing stoppers in spades, i.e. this is also not anoption.

 

What is left: 2C or 3C.

 

And the playing power of the hand is clearly to strong for a

mere 2C, hence 3C.

 

With kind regards

Marlowe

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I define

 

1 1

3NT

 

as showing just about this hand. Without such definition, 3 seems pretty much normal.

I define

 

1 1

3NT

 

as showing about a King stronger than this hand.

For me this hand is a 3 bid, with the 7th compensating for being somewhat light in high cards.

I think that reserving 3NT for hands stronger than this , not only avoids going down when partner is weak, but also makes it easier for responder to investigate slam when he has a good hand.

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I define

 

1 1

3NT

 

as showing about a King stronger than this hand. (...)

I think that reserving 3NT for hands stronger than this , not only avoids going down when partner is weak, but also makes it easier for responder to investigate slam when he has a good hand.

With a king more, the hand has so much playing strength that I usually open either 2 (or the equivalent opening if using another system).

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3. Won't make it particularly easy for p to know whether 3NT makes or not, but that's often the case with this rebid.

 

Everything else would be a misbid, IMHO. I am kind of a bean counter in this auction (a shapely hand with few HCPs can sometimes better preserve bidding space since 2 rarely will be passed out), but not with a solid suit.

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I define

 

1 1

3NT

 

as showing just about this hand. Without such definition, 3 seems pretty much normal.

I would prefer partner to be declaring in 3NT to give possible protection from the opening lead? As an aside, partner has that tad more space for investigating a possible slam?

 

The 3 bid describes your hand fully and allows partner to go on from there with confidence?

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Excuse me, but I didn't quite follow your questions. Do you mind rephrasing them?

Sorry, was not trying to be obtuse.

 

What I was trying to say, that to use 3 to describe this type of hands looks to have some benefits over 3NT. The reasons being

 

- You have no bare K or combination that requires protection from the lead. Partner may require such protection and would receive it if they were declarer in 3NT?

 

- The other point being that this type of hand can easily become a slam possibility. The 3 bid gives that extra space to investigate in limited comfort. Maybe all would not be clear until you get to, or bypass 3NT.

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Ok, now I see what you mean.

 

 

- You have no bare K or combination that requires protection from the lead. Partner may require such protection and would receive it if they were declarer in 3NT?

 

I don't give right-siding a contract too much importance because I found it to be relatively rare that that detail matters. As such, I prefer giving an accurate description of the hand.

 

 

- The other point being that this type of hand can easily become a slam possibility. The 3 bid gives that extra space to investigate in limited comfort. Maybe all would not be clear until you get to, or bypass 3NT.

 

But 3 isn't that well defined a bid either. Certainly it will get muddier if you dump hands such as the original one into it. Also, the 3NT rebid may be high, but at least it's VERY descriptive.

 

 

Still, all these are personal preferences. People here tend to use 1m-1x-3NT to show something that looks like a strong 2 in the minor, with other suits well stopped. This is why few forum regular would rebid 3NT with the given hand.

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OK, even though I'm OP, I'm adding my thoughts: Partner almost always has a game force on this auction (lots of major suit cards out there, but silent opponents), so I'm closer to a 2 club bid than a 3N bid. I think 3 clubs is a good description. What happened at the table, a 2N rebid, was an abomination to my mind, just begging to hear 6N off the whole spade suit.
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Phil, you have 8 tricks. All you need is pard to have 1 card.

I hope that card isn't the K. Then the opponents might make 3N on defense.

 

High diamond or spade cards do not give us 3N if we are open in a suit and they have a cashing ace on the side.

 

Even if pard has stops in /, we still might not make.

 

Nuno, I'm feeling better and better about 3. Thanks.

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If you rebid 3NT with this hand, a subsequent 4 from responder would be to play, right?

Not for me.

Not for me either but that's because for me 3NT shows a tad more than this hand.

 

Btw, those who bid 3NT with this hand, what do they bid with the same hand with stops in both unbid suits? Also 3NT?

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