Free Posted September 8, 2010 Report Share Posted September 8, 2010 Why? In standard bidding1♠-p-1NT can have anything at all, 4-9 hcp with 0-2 spades, 0-13 hearts, 0-13 diamonds, 0-13 clubs (almost). So how can opener make an unilateral penalty double if his partner can have anything from a 2344 9 count to a 0643 4 count? That's incorrect, because with 13 cards in a minor (or ♥) you can bid 2 over 1... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
campboy Posted September 8, 2010 Report Share Posted September 8, 2010 Why? In standard bidding1♠-p-1NT can have anything at all, 4-9 hcp with 0-2 spades, 0-13 hearts, 0-13 diamonds, 0-13 clubs (almost). So how can opener make an unilateral penalty double if his partner can have anything from a 2344 9 count to a 0643 4 count? That's incorrect, because with 13 cards in a minor (or ♥) you can bid 2 over 1... If I had 4-9 HCP with a 13-card minor I would call the TD. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gwnn Posted September 8, 2010 Report Share Posted September 8, 2010 hence the (almost) . Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
fromageGB Posted September 8, 2010 Report Share Posted September 8, 2010 I think double is best showing values, say a 15 count, and no unusual distribution. You must be a weak NT opener. No, 15-16, but I am one of those who has not yet opened 1NT with a 5 card major. I guess if you commonly open 1NT with 15-17 and a 5 card major then there is MUCH more to be said for a takeout double. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
aguahombre Posted September 8, 2010 Report Share Posted September 8, 2010 Why? In standard bidding1♠-p-1NT can have anything at all, 4-9 hcp with 0-2 spades, 0-13 hearts, 0-13 diamonds, 0-13 clubs (almost). So how can opener make an unilateral penalty double if his partner can have anything from a 2344 9 count to a 0643 4 count? That is not a problem of the style; it is a problem with using the word "penalty". If a double, by agreement, shows surprise trumps behind the bidder and extra values --+ lack of interest in partner bidding a new suit ---this double is penalty-oriented. But some call it "informative" because others think "penalty" is an absolute demand to defend. But, take the auction: 1S (p) 1N (2C) ? So, the vast majority like this to be take-out; fine. If opener has a 4-card red suit to bid, and was planning to bid it after pard's NT, the club overcall has not prevented him from doing so. This leaves 5-3-3-2 hands; Pass comes to mind.18-19 and 5-3-3-2? 3C comes to mind. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gwnn Posted September 8, 2010 Report Share Posted September 8, 2010 Why? In standard bidding1♠-p-1NT can have anything at all, 4-9 hcp with 0-2 spades, 0-13 hearts, 0-13 diamonds, 0-13 clubs (almost). So how can opener make an unilateral penalty double if his partner can have anything from a 2344 9 count to a 0643 4 count? That is not a problem of the style; it is a problem with using the word "penalty". If a double, by agreement, shows surprise trumps behind the bidder and extra values --+ lack of interest in partner bidding a new suit ---this double is penalty-oriented. But some call it "informative" because others think "penalty" is an absolute demand to defend. But, take the auction: 1S (p) 1N (2C) ? So, the vast majority like this to be take-out; fine. If opener has a 4-card red suit to bid, and was planning to bid it after pard's NT, the club overcall has not prevented him from doing so. This leaves 5-3-3-2 hands; Pass comes to mind.18-19 and 5-3-3-2? 3C comes to mind. The problem is not that opener has some mystery unbiddable hand. The problem is that responder might want to pass a takeout double and after 2♦ or 2♥ or 3♣ it will be too late. Also after a takeout double that shows, unless very strong, a 5341 or 5431, responder will know that he can show his 5 card suit. If it goes 1♠-p-1NT-2♣2♦-p-?? he can't bid 2♥ on just 5 hearts, he has to pass or bid 2♠... Opener shows 5 spades, 3 spades and 3 hearts unless he has serious extras, isn't that neat? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jdonn Posted September 8, 2010 Report Share Posted September 8, 2010 Why? In standard bidding1♠-p-1NT can have anything at all, 4-9 hcp with 0-2 spades, 0-13 hearts, 0-13 diamonds, 0-13 clubs (almost). So how can opener make an unilateral penalty double if his partner can have anything from a 2344 9 count to a 0643 4 count? That is not a problem of the style; it is a problem with using the word "penalty". If a double, by agreement, shows surprise trumps behind the bidder and extra values --+ lack of interest in partner bidding a new suit ---this double is penalty-oriented. But some call it "informative" because others think "penalty" is an absolute demand to defend. But, take the auction: 1S (p) 1N (2C) ? So, the vast majority like this to be take-out; fine. If opener has a 4-card red suit to bid, and was planning to bid it after pard's NT, the club overcall has not prevented him from doing so. This leaves 5-3-3-2 hands; Pass comes to mind.18-19 and 5-3-3-2? 3C comes to mind. The problem is not that opener has some mystery unbiddable hand. The problem is that responder might want to pass a takeout double and after 2♦ or 2♥ or 3♣ it will be too late. Or that he might want to bid 2♦ if opener hadn't bid 2♥ first. Or that he might want to know whether he can compete in a 5 or 6 card suit if the overcaller's partner raises. Or that opener might not want to force to game on a 5332 18 count. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
aguahombre Posted September 9, 2010 Report Share Posted September 9, 2010 These are not problems in an unimpeded auction? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gwnn Posted September 9, 2010 Report Share Posted September 9, 2010 I thought we were discussing takeout doubles vs penalty doubles. In an unimpeded auction there are no doubles so we shouldn't bring them into discussion. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
aguahombre Posted September 9, 2010 Report Share Posted September 9, 2010 I thought we were discussing takeout doubles vs penalty doubles. In an unimpeded auction there are no doubles so we shouldn't bring them into discussion. True, unless we are making the point that when an intervening bid takes up no room and allows you to make the same bid you wanted to make --it is practical to make the same bid you wanted to make. In fact, with 5-3-4-1 the opps have helped you. You might have been 5-3-3-2 without the interfering bid. And how does doubling 2C with 5-(3-4)-1 clarify which red suit is 4 long? Sometimes the club suit gets raised before you can sort things out. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gwnn Posted September 9, 2010 Report Share Posted September 9, 2010 Do you purposefully neglect to address all the points jdonn and I have raised or do you really think you've addressed them? Anyway I don't know why you neglect to address any of them, I will try to address your points. The takeout double would say "hi partner, I have a nice hand with short clubs. Perhaps you are interested in penalising them or you are interested in playing your 5 card suit if you have one. If you don't have interest in any of those things, we can still play my 5 card major in which you presumably have 2 cards in".It shows normally 11 cards out of 13 of declarer's. If you just make your normal 5-4 bid, you eliminate the possibility of defending their contract doubled when partner had the clubs and not you. You also eliminate the possibility of partner showing his 5 card suit. No, partner does not know which red suit is 4 cards long. However now partner can compete in two different strains! He can't bid 3red over 3 clubs so easily to compete when we both have four, but he can now bid 3 red over 3 clubs in both suits when he has five and I have four or three. It is easy to see that the takeout double is superior in this regard. You gain more than you lose. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hanp Posted September 9, 2010 Report Share Posted September 9, 2010 I thought we were discussing takeout doubles vs penalty doubles. In an unimpeded auction there are no doubles so we shouldn't bring them into discussion. True, unless we are making the point that when an intervening bid takes up no room and allows you to make the same bid you wanted to make --it is practical to make the same bid you wanted to make. In fact, with 5-3-4-1 the opps have helped you. You might have been 5-3-3-2 without the interfering bid. And how does doubling 2C with 5-(3-4)-1 clarify which red suit is 4 long? Sometimes the club suit gets raised before you can sort things out.Are you suggesting that we play penalty doubles after 1C - (1D) too? After all, the only response that is taken away is 1D. Your argument does not make sense. Just because we can still bid 2D or 2H doesn't mean that it is best to bid 2D or 2H with the hands with which would would have done so without competition. If we double with a 5-3-4-1 shape partner will be better placed, not worse, if the opponents raise to 3C than after we bid 2D. With 5 or even 6 hearts partner will be able to bid 3H, while if we bid 2D then that would have been ill advised. By playing double as takeout we can still bid 2H with AQJxx AQxx xxx x and we can double with AQxxx AQx Jxxx x. We can also double with AQJxx AQxx Jx Kx, planning to raise hearts if partner picks them and bid 2NT over 2D. If the opponents didn't interfere we would probably bid 2H and pray we don't miss a game. The takeout double allows for much more flexibility. With KJxxxx AQx AQx x we can double planning to bid 2S over whatever partner bids. What would we bid with that hand if the opponents didn't interfere, a very heavy 2S, or an ugly 3S? And on all of these hands, we'd be thrilled if partner passes. It's perfectly fine if you have grown up in the age of penalty doubles and are unwilling to change to the agreements that most people use these days. It is indeed possible that you will pick up a ♣AQJx and are able to get a juicy number, while we have to pass in the hope that partner can double for takeout. But please don't fill these threads with non-sensical arguments that lack any form of logic, just because you can't deal with the way the game of bridge has evolved. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gnasher Posted September 9, 2010 Report Share Posted September 9, 2010 Deleted (because Han beat me to it). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hanp Posted September 9, 2010 Report Share Posted September 9, 2010 Aww come on Andy, I want to see you say it too! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Phil Posted September 9, 2010 Report Share Posted September 9, 2010 Opener's double is TO in a suit below opener's. Honestly I don't have strong feelings about suits above opener's or at the three level and I think we play it as 'cards'. Responder's double is 2-3 of theirs without three of opener's suit, no matter what the level. However, as long as we are discussing this, what about: - 1 minor - pass - 1N - 2x2N? - 1 major - pass - 1N - 2x2N? - 1 minor - pass - 1N - 2xp - p - 2N - 1 major - pass - 1N - 2xp - p - 2N Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jdonn Posted September 9, 2010 Report Share Posted September 9, 2010 About once every 6 months, someone who was previously harmless on the forums discovers sarcasm as a form of discussion and then forgets to make any actual points from then on. It's always sad. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gnasher Posted September 9, 2010 Report Share Posted September 9, 2010 Aww come on Andy, I want to see you say it too! My example was 1♦ (1♥) dbl Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
aguahombre Posted September 9, 2010 Report Share Posted September 9, 2010 It's perfectly fine if you have grown up in the age of penalty doubles and are unwilling to change to the agreements that most people use these days. It is indeed possible that you will pick up a ♣AQJx and are able to get a juicy number, while we have to pass in the hope that partner can double for takeout. But please don't fill these threads with non-sensical arguments that lack any form of logic, just because you can't deal with the way the game of bridge has evolved.Everything above that quote is a comprehensive answer to questions I had about the method for this particular auction: 1S (P) 1NT (2C)? Advocating a different, and maybe very old method -- then asking questions about how the new way gains certainly doesn't connote sarcasm to me, Jdonn. Also, I fail to see how an informative double on the second round --by opener, with say, AKXXX AX XX AJTX (not everyone would open 1NT with 5-2-2-4) or similar hands with extra strength and clubs would be equated to first round negative doubles. I think they are entirely different, and any sarcasm would have occurred during that comparison. While being an advocate of "informative" doubles by opener on his second round, I have at least read and appreciated the other viewpoints. I don't claim the methods of others in this situation are bad, wrong, or whatever. And I certainly don't consider methods which are not mine non-sensical or illogical. Maybe others could have the same tolerance for different perspectives; they might even gain knowlege in order to deal at the table with the styles of people who have not evolved as much as they have. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MickyB Posted September 9, 2010 Report Share Posted September 9, 2010 Does opener's double below two of his opened suit show extras? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
awm Posted September 9, 2010 Author Report Share Posted September 9, 2010 It seems like the important issues here are the frequencies of the hand types, and what's likely to happen when the hand type for the "wrong" kind of double is held. In negative double auctions that people are somehow comparing, like 1♣-1♦-X and 1♦-1♥-X, penalizing usually requires a good five-card holding in the opponent suit (at the one-level). This is relatively infrequent. If we do have this hand, opener will usually have singleton or doubleton and balance with a double, especially since selling out at the one-level is often a poor result. It's true that the negative double hand can often make another call (like one of a major) but it's not hard to construct examples where having the double available helps clarify the nature of responder's hand. Comparing this to the auction from this thread (1A-P-1N-(bid)-X) doesn't seem that accurate. To give some reasons why penalty double might be better here: we only need a good four-card holding to penalize at the two-level (a level higher) which will be somewhat more frequent. The 1NT bidder is often fairly balanced and will often be reluctant to "save us" by balancing with a double (especially if minimum, or if that would force the three-level, or if he has three cards in their suit also, or if holding a singleton in our first-bid suit). On the other hand, when we have the "takeout double" hand type if we are playing penalty doubles, there are a number of other calls we can make (for example bidding a four-card suit to show nine of our cards, or bidding 2NT as some sort of takeout bid, or even passing with the "expected" 5332 hands and letting partner balance on his five-card suit). Obviously adding takeout double to our arsenal will help somewhat, but the exclusion of certain unbid suits as a possible fit (for example after 1♦-P-1N-2♠ we are unlikely to want to play in hearts) can make a big difference. Note that after 1♦-1♥ overcall, we could easily want to play in any strain (except hearts I suppose, although we might want to defend 1♥X). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gwnn Posted September 9, 2010 Report Share Posted September 9, 2010 awm nobody was comparing them. Hanoi5 said that he prefers 1♠-p-1NT-(anything)x as penalty if 1NT was standard, non-forcing. then I told him it shouldn't be penalty because the 1NT is not necessarily "fairly balanced", in fact it shows 6-9 hcp any shape except 3 spades. then aguahombre said that he prefers that in this case, if the overcall was just 2♣, we should play "system on", so x=penalty and 2red=natural, etc. No one said that playing these doubles as penalty is as absurd as playing 1♦-(1♥)-x as penalty. Hanp and gnasher were saying that aguahombre's principle would require us to play these 1-level doubles also as penalty. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hanp Posted September 9, 2010 Report Share Posted September 9, 2010 Maybe others could have the same tolerance for different perspectives. You can play the best methods in the world, but if you post nonsense to advocate the methods then I'm still calling the nonsense nonsense. That doesn't mean that I'm intolerant to the methods, by no means. I certainly believe that good players can do well playing penalty doubles, even if they call them informative. If you can't handle people calling your nonsense nonsense, my advice is to post less nonsense. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
awm Posted September 9, 2010 Author Report Share Posted September 9, 2010 Let's look for a moment at the auction 1♣-P-1N-2♠. Arguably the 1NT call is "almost" like a club raise -- partner usually has either four card clubs or 3343 (maybe 5♦-(332) is possible too). This means our side's best fit is quite likely to be in clubs, although there is some chance of a 4-4 diamond fit outplaying a 5-3 club fit or the like. The 1NT bidder is also very likely to be balanced, since he could raise clubs or bid 1♦ with most unbalanced hands here. This seems like the best possible situation to play penalty doubles. Partner is balanced and limited. If we hold four spades behind the bidder, we can often take them for a big number on hands where partner would have trouble balancing (or would balance with 3♣). If we have a "takeout double" type hand (say 2335 or 1(43)5) then we can compete in clubs; that's a good fit anyway and it's not like partner would've converted a takeout double. Further, if double were takeout then we would need a bid with 18/19 balanced and a non-takeout shape. Bidding 3NT seems a little weird, since we were presumably going to bid 2NT without intervention and the knowledge that RHO has long spades if anything makes 3NT less likely to make. The implication is that 2NT probably has to be 18/19 balanced if double is takeout (so we can't use it as good/bad). It seems a lot better once again to play double=penalty, which frees up the 2NT call (you could use it as 4♦-5♣, or to distinguish competitive and forward-going 3♣ calls). So I think it's pretty clear that 1♣-P-1N-2♠-X is better as penalty. Can an equally good case be made for playing some of the other sequences (i.e. 1♠-P-1N-2♥) as takeout? If so, how should we draw the line? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Apollo81 Posted September 9, 2010 Report Share Posted September 9, 2010 How about "penalty only when we open a minor and they overcall a major" Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gnasher Posted September 9, 2010 Report Share Posted September 9, 2010 Does opener's double below two of his opened suit show extras? I don't think it promises much more than a bare minimum. With AQ10xx Qxx x KQxx, I'd want to double 2♦ for takeout. Take away ♠Q and I probably wouldn't. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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