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1. Spades. At least four. Not sure if we are supposed to bid 2 with more than four.

 

2. Red suits. Depending on what other options you have it may show 4-4 or longer hearts. If you play 1NT as natural here it could also be 45.

 

3. 44, opening values or maybe a little less.

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2. Takeout.

 

3. Takeout.

 

1. I play it as spades (usually exactly 4), but some play this as takeout.

put them in order, dammit...

 

i read through this without looking at the leading number and thought you were being an idiot for a moment (then i realized i was being an idiot :/)

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i read through this without looking at the leading number and thought you were being an idiot for a moment (then i realized i was being an idiot :/)

LOL! Same thing happened to me! I had to read it 4 times until I realised.

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Why does the 1st double have to have 4 spades? With only 3, do we have to bid NT and let them off the hook?  QXX XX AX KQTXXX would seem to be a reasonable double.

IMO mainly for protection from the psychers. With the hand you showed I would think 3 would be a reasonable call.

 

Edit:oops lost focus on the original auction so yes maybe 2NT

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Why does the 1st double have to have 4 spades? With only 3, do we have to bid NT and let them off the hook?  QXX XX AX KQTXXX would seem to be a reasonable double.

IMO mainly for protection from the psychers. With the hand you showed I would think 3 would be a reasonable call.

how about some nice # of NTs?

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Why does the 1st double have to have 4 spades? With only 3, do we have to bid NT and let them off the hook? QXX XX AX KQTXXX would seem to be a reasonable double.

No we don't want to defend 1x with only 3+3 trumps. Also we don't want p to bid spades with four of them, especially since the 1 isn't a psyche most of the time.

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#1 showes spades, this is a counter measure against a well known psych

#2 T/O, 4-4 in the red suits, ... the fine tuned meaning is depend, how

you play a 1NT overcall in this position

#3 T/O, showes short a heart shortage, 4 spades and a 4 card minor,

basically a prebalancing (or OBAR bid = opponents bid and raised),

if partner wants to know about the minor, he bids 2NT, scrambling

 

With kind regards

Marlowe

 

PS (added later): #3 - spades and diamonds :P , although you may

be able to construct hands, where you will be able to reach clubs, the

important factor being, that the X showes a heart shortage, i.e. if p

bids 3C as a response to X, this is to play.

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1st is a penalty double of spades. Could be a 9 count with 4 spades or very strong with 5 (with 8-10 you'd bid 2 natural).

 

2nd is a takeout double. 4+4, could be longer in both suits but especially diamonds (you'd often double with 46 but never with 64)

 

3rs is a takeout double. something like:

 

4243

4144

4045

 

with about 9-10 points.

 

you had no good bid the previous round because you don't have heart length, but you have to get into the auction now. You won't have 5 diamonds or spades because then you would have acted on the previous round.

 

1-p-1-p

2-x

 

could, however, have 5 clubs, but not 5 spades (you will often be unable/unwilling to bid your 5 card club suit over 1).

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1.

1 X 1♠ X if double is spades, what do you bid holding 4 's and what is:

 

1 X 1 X ?

 

2. 1 P 1♠ X takeout 44 in the red suits is clear

 

3.

P P 1 P

1 P 2 X

If X is takeout, a hand wanting to penalise 2 could have overcalled 1 on the first round or now must pass?

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1.

1 X 1♠ X  if double is spades, what do you bid holding 4 's and what is:

 

1 X 1 X ?

 

2. 1 P 1♠ X  takeout 44 in the red suits is clear

 

3.

P P 1 P

1 P 2 X

If X is takeout, a hand wanting to penalise 2 could have overcalled 1 on the first round or now must pass?

#1 if you have 4 hearts, you bid 2H or 3H depending on strength.

The X of 1H is also penalty, or better it showes hearts, similar to the double

of 1S.

#3 Pass, if you have length in hearts, p will be short in hearts, and will and should

reopen the bidding, if 2H reaches him.

I think that there hands, which would like to play 2Hx but could not act over 1C,

a typical shape is 4441, you are not a big fan of 4 card overcalls, and neither do

you like to make a offshape 1NT overcall, which means you have to pass.

 

With kind regards

Marlowe

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1.

1 X 1♠ X  if double is spades, what do you bid holding 4 's and what is:

 

1 X 1 X ?

 

2. 1 P 1♠ X  takeout 44 in the red suits is clear

 

3.

P P 1 P

1 P 2 X

If X is takeout, a hand wanting to penalise 2 could have overcalled 1 on the first round or now must pass?

This is an echo of an earlier thread where you asked the same question and got the same answer.

 

[1] x [1] 2

 

shows 4+ hearts. It is that simple, and remains that simple. Trying to have this bid show 5+ hearts is contrary to (sound) established fundamentals. As is trying to have the double of 1 be anything but penalty of 1...a suit your partner has implied and a suit in which the opponents will psyche with virtual impunity if you can't double them.

 

As for the last point: show me a hand that passes 1 and now, opposite a silent partner can double 2 for penalty. It doesn't exist unless doubler was at another table on the previous round of bidding.

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Simple and established fundamentals for some perhaps, however these auctions continue to cause problems for me in casual partnerships. 1m X 1M X expecting 44 in the unbids suits is not such an uncommon understanding.

 

My apologies for repeating the same questions.

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IMO the use of 1m-X-1M-X as penalty became much less appealing when 1M=forcing became the standard treatment. (At any rate its name should be something more like 'spades-showing' than 'penalty' since 1 isn't a possible final contract.)

 

I have no beef with a pair that agrees to play it as the unbid suits, especially given the rarity with which the average tournament player EVER psychs in the US. I play it that way myself with my reg p.

 

But do be aware that the standard meaning is spades, and if indiscussed that's what you should assume it is.

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1m X 1M X expecting 44 in the unbids suits is not such an uncommon understanding.

You can bid 2 with 4-4 in the unbid suits, or just with hearts and too much strength for 2. I wouldn't bid 3 on a 4-card suit.

 

A hand with four diamonds and <4 hearts and too much strength for 2 would probably either bid notrumps (with a club stopper) or double (with spade length).

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