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Miserable


What is the least of all evils?  

48 members have voted

  1. 1. What is the least of all evils?

    • 1NT
      25
    • 2C
      8
    • 2D
      11
    • 2H
      2
    • 2S
      0
    • 2NT
      0
    • Something Really Insane
      2


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I would open 1NT and avoid this. I very rarely do it with a singleton but I'm not against it in principle. This hand has obvious rebid problems and looks fine for a 5-1 spade fit with the top tricks and the queen of spades.

 

Btw you could condense your last 3 poll options.

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2 for me. Twice in the last 10 years I've played in a 3-3 club fit instead of a 4-4 heart fit because of taking this action. The upside is, my partners can always rebid 5-card spade suits without worrying about a singleton. So we don't miss 5-3 spade fits, and we don't play 5-1 spade misfits.

 

Back in the day, I asked Max Hardy about a similar hand (unfortunately, one of those 3-3 club fits occurred while playing with my girlfriend), when we were standing in line for a drink at the Vegas Regional during a break between rounds. His response was, "2 clubs. That's an easy one." Granted, we're all in the 21st century now, and Max was codifying a system developed long before the yellow book laid it all out, but all things considered, I still like 2 here. Having partners who take false preferences in the minors helps mitigate the downside (though, it admittedly, it does create other downside for those 4-diamond, 5-club hands I open 1, but that's for another thread.

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It would not occur to me to open 1NT, but I would have no qualms about rebidding 1NT.

 

Having said that, a 2 rebid does have merit. But if partner passes 1NT, we are probably in the right spot.

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This is an easy 2 rebid. I don't like opening 1N with a stiff, even when it is the A/K, altho I have done it and will do it again.. but not with the Queen. As for rebidding 1N: ugh.... a huge underbid, even if by agreement you may hold this shape.. and if you don't have that agreement, it is a shape distortion as well as a strength distortion.

 

2 has been the mark time bid for decades, and the reasoning behind it is as valid now as it was in years past..... personally, I don't recall ever being dumped in a 3-3, but that may be because I try to forget bids that don't work out :rolleyes:

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This is an easy 2 rebid.

That you, Max?

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I'd open it 1NT and haven't had (m)any troubles with it. If I play in the 5-1 spade fit at least the singleton is the queen. If you made me open 1 then I would rebid 2 because everything else seems a much worser distortion.
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So I have the choice of bidding a three card suit or downgrading a 15 count with a stiff Q and my long suit is Q9xxx? You can't be serious. If you don't downgrade a hand like this, you'll never downgrade.

 

In spite of this I have no strong feelings opening this 1N in the first place, however if your hand evaluation tells you this isn't a 15 then it still isn't after partner's mostlikely response.

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So I have the choice of bidding a three card suit or downgrading a 15 count with a stiff Q and my long suit is Q9xxx? You can't be serious. If you don't downgrade a hand like this, you'll never downgrade.

 

In spite of this I have no strong feelings opening this 1N in the first place, however if your hand evaluation tells you this isn't a 15 then it still isn't after partner's mostlikely response.

I'm not sure I'm taking your point here. Once you opt to open 1 (OP condition) granted, you have to downgrade to rebid 1NT, and as you suggest, that's not hard to do.

 

But the downgrade question seems to call into question the first bid, not the second; both 1-1; 1NT and 1-1; 2 are sequences that would encompass a 14 point hand. It's about whether (and in what circumstances, e.g. stiff honor) you rebid 1NT with the stiff (or what lengths you're willing to go to in order to avoid it).

 

The whether-to-downgrade question is sort of a question for a different OP, or at least one with an additional answer choice: "I would have opened 1NT"

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This is an easy 2 rebid. I don't like opening 1N with a stiff, even when it is the A/K, altho I have done it and will do it again.. but not with the Queen. As for rebidding 1N: ugh.... a huge underbid, even if by agreement you may hold this shape.. and if you don't have that agreement, it is a shape distortion as well as a strength distortion.

 

2 has been the mark time bid for decades, and the reasoning behind it is as valid now as it was in years past..... personally, I don't recall ever being dumped in a 3-3, but that may be because I try to forget bids that don't work out :o

You exagerate with the huge underbid thing, stiff Queen is to be downgraded, singleton in partner's suit is to be downgraded as well.

 

I like the 2 option, but sadly I have that bid overloaded already with 4-5 hands, not gonna bid it with this too.

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If you don't downgrade a hand like this, you'll never downgrade.

! Partner bid the stiff queen, you have a 5 card suit, AK A, and we were even gifted with 9 9 9. Are we looking at the same hand?!?

I don't think we should award the Q the same significance that we would if partner had opened 1. The 5-card diamond suit is not much of an asset since it's so poor. The 9's are good, but not good enough to offset the other things. Change one or two of the 9s to 10s and I'd open 1NT.

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2D.

 

1NT is out, the shape is wrong and so is the point count,

I dont mind, if one thing does not match, but two is one

too much.

 

2H is out, although I play weak reverses, this hand is not

a reverse.

 

2C is out, it showes 4 cards, and it completely buries the

heart fit, maybe not in NA, where bidding the 4th suit is

natural most of the time, but for me the heart suit would be

lost.

 

2D just showes a 5 carder, can still be based on hands with

17HCP, and does not bury the heart suit.

 

With kind regards

Marlowe

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1NT is the cheapest rebid so you aren't overloading it by putting hands like this one into it. It may be worthwhile designing a checkback structure that allows opener to describe this hand.

 

I am OK with a 2 rebid or a 1NT opening. 2 is really awful IMHO.

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If you don't downgrade a hand like this, you'll never downgrade.

! Partner bid the stiff queen, you have a 5 card suit, AK A, and we were even gifted with 9 9 9. Are we looking at the same hand?!?

I don't think we should award the Q the same significance that we would if partner had opened 1. The 5-card diamond suit is not much of an asset since it's so poor. The 9's are good, but not good enough to offset the other things. Change one or two of the 9s to 10s and I'd open 1NT.

I'm just saying, open 1 then rebid 1NT if you want, but know that you are underbidding because you think it's the best option, don't go around thinking this hand should be downgraded. It shouldn't!

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