Jump to content

How can this game be bid?


the_dude

Recommended Posts

1D-1H

3D-3H

4H

 

Looks pretty normal. I think 3 by north is pretty much a wtp.

Yes and I'd bid 3 with Axx, x, AQJxxxx, Ax, how much do you want to bid 3 over that, the S hand is a near automatic pass over 3.

 

Playing the modified system that I play 2N is GF artificial, which I'm not quite worth, but if I choose to use it we'll reach 4, if I don't we'll play 3.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

[hv=d=n&v=b&n=saxhkxxdaqxxxxxca&s=sxxxxhaq10xxdxcxxx]133|200|Scoring: IMP[/hv]

 

Playing 2/1, how can we get to 4H on this hand? (no opposition bidding)

 

More to the point, after 1D - 1H, what is North's rebid?

If you play a balanced club your auction could go:

 

1-1

2N-4

 

2N showing a good hand, 6+ and 3.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm going to test the strength of Bluecalm's blood vessels by suggesting:

 

  1-1

  2-3

  4

 

Talking of things that Bluecalm doesn't like, if 1-1;1 were forcing you could then play 1-1;2 as artificial, covering various strong hands including this one.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

A control rich 17 with a seventh diamond is very good for 1 1; 3

 

When partner bids our fragment our hand has improved some more.

 

It seems wrong that you make the same bid on this fitting monster as you would on a weaker hand with fewer diamonds and a stiff heart.

 

Maybe this rebid has evolved into something different (and significantly stronger) in 2/1 but in other standard systems 3 certainly shows a weaker hand - Truscott's bidding dictionary describes the range as ?15-18, Crowhurst's Acol Index as about 7 playing tricks. As far as I can tell Hardy does not define the range simply saying that the jump rebid shows a six-card suit.

 

By both measures above this hand is significantly stronger than a non-forcing jump rebid.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I definitely agree that this hand has too much playing strength for 3D. Since there is no perfect bid here I am choosing this rather than a bid that is right on values but is a pretty big distortion (2S or 3C) which could lead to bad things, like partner raising 2S.

 

I think that 3D will lead to less bad things happening than 2S or 3C. Even though 3D is not forcing, partner usually bids over it, and then we might be ok. Even if partner passes 3D, it's not like a game is guaranteed on our cards. It has good playing strength but if we don't have a fit it's a much worse hand.

 

So overall while I'm not thrilled with 3D I am choosing it as better than the alternatives, that is generally what happens in a bidding problem.

 

If there was some perfect bid I would choose that though!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm going to test the strength of Bluecalm's blood vessels by suggesting:

 

  1-1

  2-3

  4

 

Talking of things that Bluecalm doesn't like, if 1-1;1 were forcing you could then play 1-1;2 as artificial, covering various strong hands including this one.

I think you may have something here. ( I'm assuming you think this 4 loser hand is strong enough for a game forcing SJS ).

[ This sequence can only be used over a 1m open and a 1H response ] .

 

I'm going to expand it a bit ( but have not thought it thru yet ... ) by using a relay to get more ways for Responder to show his hand.

For example you can have 2 ways to bid 3H -- one to show 5 cards and the other to show 6+ cards:

 

1D - 1H

2S! ( GF, SJS, maybe artificial ) ??

 

......- 3C! ( relay to 3D! )

3D! - ??

......- 3H! = 5h, no 4d, no 4s ; whereas a direct 3H( over 2S!) = 6+h, no 4s

...or -4H! = 5h, 4s

 

etc, etc

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Everything Cascade said agrees with everything I believe about the opening hand. 4D means something else, 2NT means something else (for me) and I can't think of a righteous rebid. If I try 2S, and get raised to 3 ---there is no assurance responder has five hearts; but I guess I am stuck with that, even without 2S being artificial.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

A control rich 17 with a seventh diamond is very good for 1 1; 3

 

When partner bids our fragment our hand has improved some more.

 

It seems wrong that you make the same bid on this fitting monster as you would on a weaker hand with fewer diamonds and a stiff heart.

 

Maybe this rebid has evolved into something different (and significantly stronger) in 2/1 but in other standard systems 3 certainly shows a weaker hand - Truscott's bidding dictionary describes the range as ?15-18, Crowhurst's Acol Index as about 7 playing tricks. As far as I can tell Hardy does not define the range simply saying that the jump rebid shows a six-card suit.

 

By both measures above this hand is significantly stronger than a non-forcing jump rebid.

The scoring method and the vulnerability does not bode well for Justin's choice either IMO. IMV you need to take a risk with this hand and put up with the variance.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

[hv=d=n&v=b&n=saxhkxxdaqxxxxxca&s=sxxxxhaq10xxdxcxxx]133|200|Scoring: IMP[/hv]

 

Playing 2/1, how can we get to 4H on this hand? (no opposition bidding)

 

More to the point, after 1D - 1H, what is North's rebid?

My system is simple, I open 2D to show about 19, single suited or balanced.

So 2D 2H(relayed) 3D 3H 4H looks quite normal.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm going to test the strength of Bluecalm's blood vessels by suggesting:

 

  1-1

  2-3

  4

 

Talking of things that Bluecalm doesn't like, if 1-1;1 were forcing you could then play 1-1;2 as artificial, covering various strong hands including this one.

If 1 is forcing and 2 is artificial, why would responder take away a whole bidding level by bidding 3?

 

This makes it very difficult for opener to describe his hand.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

If 1 is forcing and 2 is artificial, why would responder take away a whole bidding level by bidding 3?

 

This makes it very difficult for opener to describe his hand.

I was suggesting two different ways to bid the hand, in two different systems.

 

In the first sequence, where responder bid 3, 2 was a natural jump shift.

 

Then I suggested playing 2 as artificial and multi-meaning. I didn't specify how the auction would continue after that.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Standard bidding is:

 

1 1

3 pass

 

Of course standard sucks here.

One of those situations where changing your system will reap bigger benefits than improving your judgment.

 

If you play gazilli this hand is wtp (because you either go through 2 forcing or use 2NT as showing 6+-3 if that's your choice).

Playing precision the hand is truly WTP. You are automatically in game before you even start thinking how to bid this.

 

With Gazilli it goes:

 

1 - 1

2* - 2**

3/4 - 4

 

2 = either natural or any 17+

2 = weak, not GF even opposite 17+

rest natural

 

In precision it goes (assuming Meckwell simplified base):

 

1 - 1

2 - 2

4

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I think this might be a hand where big club system wins over standard bidding. After 1 1, 3 seems the bid that is least distorting, although it is pretty heavy with the actual hand. It's possible that a clever 1 or 2 rebid from opener might work out better on this hand, but they will often lose on others.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1♦-1♥

  2♠-3♠

  4♥

 

Talking of things that Bluecalm doesn't like, if 1♦-1♥;1♠ were forcing you could then play 1♦-1♥;2♠ as artificial, covering various strong hands including this one.

 

Oh c'mon. I have nothing against playing 1 not being limited to 17 or w/e. I just say you can pass that with weakish hand hence it's NF. I think I would agree with followers of this style what hand bid this way. I just call the bid which can be passed NF and apparently other people call it forcing as it's usually not passed :)

 

I am all for using some bid to show 6+-3 in partner's major (or to use multimeaning bids when it's one of the options). I usually use 2NT for those hands playing precision or polish club (cause natural 2NT is not needed there). If you play Gazilli you can do that too with either 2 or 2NT.

The problem arises if partner bids instad of . If you play Gazilli you can still use 2 as multimeaning (cause all the monster's go to 2 anyway). I guess in real standard you are not going to bid 2 though !

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...