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General knowledge


nige1

Your call?  

47 members have voted

  1. 1. Your call?

    • Pass
      28
    • 2N
      2
    • 3D
      16
    • Other
      1


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[hv=d=w&v=n&s=sa1085h k10d j62c j432]133|100|Scoring: Matchpoints

_P (_P) 1 (1)

1N (_P) 2 (_P)

??

(Konrad Ciborowski posted this hand in another forum)

You are dealer (West).

What action do you take?

What would be typical hands for partner?

Would partner's 2 rebid normally show extra values

  • In your experience?
  • As a matter of general bridge knowledge?

[/hv]

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Even with hands where 1Nt will likely score better than 2D partner may bid 2D with 6D and extra shape (especially with a S stiff), the reason is that you wont necessary buy the hand at 1Nt anyway.

 

xx

xx

AKJxxx

KJx

 

since responder didnt make a neg X its likely opps have a H fit. Instead of passing and having to take a decision over 2H/2S why not bid 2D right now ?

 

Its sure that you would prefer to play 1NT but you have to be realistic about the chance of them not competing.

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Even with hands where 1Nt will likely score better than 2D partner may bid 2D with 6D and extra shape (especially with a S stiff), the reason is that you wont necessary buy the hand at 1Nt anyway.

 

xx

xx

AKJxxx

KJx

 

since responder didnt make a neg X its likely opps have a H fit. Instead of passing and having to take a decision over 2H/2S why not bid 2D right now ?

 

Its sure that you would prefer to play 1NT but you have to be realistic about the chance of them not competing.

Well, partner can't have that hand, as two of his Jacks are in Responder's hand.

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What action do you take?

3

What would be typical hands for partner?

Six diamonds, not enough to invite game, unsuitable for a 2 opening or a 1NT opening, and either unwilling to play 1NT or not expecting that we'll be allowed to play there. For example:

xx Axx AQxxxx Kx

xx AQxx AQxxxx x

xx xxx AKxxxx AQ

xx AQxx Q10xxxx A

 

Would partner's 2 rebid normally show extra values

No. Why should we have to suffer in 1NT when we belong in 2?

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Continuing my trend of voting for the 'other' option, I think 2 might be a good bid if partner understands what I'm doing. For example, xx AQxx AKTxxx x or something would be nice and partner would know our clubs are probably weak and we have a shot to find 5.
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Continuing my trend of voting for the 'other' option, I think 2 might be a good bid if partner understands what I'm doing. For example, xx AQxx AKTxxx x or something would be nice and partner would know our clubs are probably weak and we have a shot to find 5.

I thought about that, but that call seemed to me to understae the club holding. Jxx is not bad in that suit. I'm not opposed to 2, personally.

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3.

 

I have 2, 2 and 2NT available for stronger/more NT-oriented raises. 3 only shows that I would compete to 3 over a balance. Partner should only move with exceptional distribution.

 

I wouldn't expect partner to jump to 3 on something like:

 

x

Axxx

Axxxxx

AQ

 

 

Also, I would like to keep out a possible 2 balance, which migt lead to succesfull 3, out.

 

And no, 2 doesn't show extras.

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Far too strong to pass. 2 Diamond denies extra strength, but shows extra length which is great.

 

I am still looking for 3 NT and if they had removed my 3 Diamond card from my bidding box, this would be my bid. I bet that in the long run 3 NT will outscore all passers on hands like this.

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I thought my hand was worth the 3 effort. Partner is supposed to be short in spades (and I have the Ace!) and he might have the A or it might be with the overcaller and so he should be able to ruff at least one heart in ly hand. All in all this calls for a little raise.
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Thank you for your views. IMO non-vul at pairs, your 1N usually scores well, whether you make it or not. Non-vul opponents should try to disturb it.

 

Partner's removal to 2, however, is usually constructive, showing extra values, with some interest in game. Not always. But usually. I claimed that this is inherent in the nature of Bridge; and thus "a matter generally known to Bridge players" .

 

[sIGH] :) once again I am proven wrong :) [/sIGH]

 

But thanks anyway :)

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I thought general knowledge was that when responder has shown a limited-balanced hand (1NT usually 8 to 10 after overcall), and then Opener rebids his suit at the 2-level, opener wants to play it right there.

 

3D by responder is not an invite to 3NT, but it seems to be the right bid anyway(s) to avoid any cheap re-entry by the opps.

 

(Edit): If this were a director call, because 2D was slow, and responder did anything but pass or bid 3D, I would rule against (if I were a director or committee member).

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Thank you for your views. IMO non-vul at pairs, your 1N usually scores well, whether you make it or not. Non-vul opponents should try to disturb it.

 

Partner's removal to 2, however, is usually constructive, showing extra values, with some interest in game. Not always. But usually. I claimed that this is inherent in the nature of Bridge; and thus "a matter generally known to Bridge players" .

 

[sIGH] :) once again I am proven wrong :) [/sIGH]

 

But thanks anyway :)

Nigel

 

I saw the same discussion of the hand on another forum...

(Part of the reason that I didn't comment here)

 

Personally, I found the claim that a 2 rebid promises extra strength dubious at best. As I learned matters, the rebid promises length but says nothing about strength. I'd be surprised that to discover that my opponents had this agreement. I certainly don't believe that this is general bridge knowledge.

 

It's possible that this is a regional variation...

Bidding style in Scotland is probably quite different than what I am used to here in MA

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It's possible that this is a regional variation...

Bidding style in Scotland is probably quite different than what I am used to here in MA

Nigel and I are the two main posters from Scotland, with the odd junior occasionally chipping in. We have been comparing our answers to bidding competitions for at least ten years and the only possible conclusion is that we have very different styles.

 

However the rest of Scotland would be appalled if it were thought that either of our styles were representative of the norm :)

 

Paul

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I saw the same discussion of the hand on another forum...

(Part of the reason that I didn't comment here)

 

Personally, I found the claim that a 2 rebid promises extra strength dubious at best.  As I learned matters, the rebid promises length but says nothing about strength.  I'd be surprised that to discover that my opponents had this agreement.  I certainly don't believe that this is general bridge knowledge.

 

It's possible that this is a regional variation...

Bidding style in Scotland is probably quite different than what I am used to here in MA

Not that it matters much but I thought that 2 usually shows extra values - not necessarily high cards :)

 

Cardsharp is right: I'm no bidding pundit (as this thread demonstrates). :(

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Pass geez partner could only have 8-9 hcp and open 1d and rebid 2d. Lets not play pard for some perfect 13-14.

 

 

If you want to force pard to 3d to shut out the opp ok, but at some point pard needs to know when you have a real invite or when you are preempting.

 

 

See this thread.

 

http://forums.bridgebase.com/index.php?sho...=0entry413224

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Pass geez partner could only have 8-9 hcp and open 1d and rebid 2d. Lets not play pard for some perfect 13-14.

 

If you want to force pard to 3d to shut out the opp ok, but at some point pard needs to know when you have a real invite or when you are preempting.

I vote for 3. Putting an opener on a shapely 8-9 point hand is not winning bridge -- what percentage of 1D openers are going to have <10 HCP? 1%? And even then partner will never accept, he will pass 3. Mike, if you can rig partner to have the most minimum of hands, then surely I can rig the suits to be thus :

 

9xx Axxx AT9xxx void

 

He will still make 3 a vast majority of the time. And when he is down, we have a cheap save versus the enemy club contract.

 

Your second point about partner needing to know about a real invite vs. a courtesy raise is important, but that's what the cue-bid is for. 3 is merely a courtesy raise letting partner know about the 9-card diamond fit. A serious invite would cue -- you have already limited your hand by bidding 1NT so it can't be a super-strong hand.

 

Finally, in response to nige1 : I think it's a common error to try to get too cute tactically in part-score auctions, when the information exchange has been limited. Your references to "1NT white tends to score well" indicates to me that you may be falling into this trap. Just bid your hand. I would rebid 2 on almost any unbalanced hand with 6 diamonds, and similarly, I would not disturb an opponent's white 1NT on a mediocre balanced hand just because "1NT white tends to score well". At some point, you have to play bridge and not rely on scoring quirks to make your decisions for you.

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