Jump to content

ATB


kfay

Recommended Posts

You're playing with a random expert partner and have no agreements. There's probably plenty of blame to go around.

 

[hv=pc=n&s=sk432haqt2dt32c32&n=sj5hkj987dak654ca&d=s&v=n&b=15&a=pp1hp2cp2dp2sp3dp3hp4cp4sp4np5cp5dp6hppp]266|200[/hv]

Link to comment
Share on other sites

At least in the US, it's fine to assume drury with a random expert. I suspect Cascade even knows this and is just being difficult :)

 

It would be nice to be able to bid 3 over 2 to show a 5-5 slam try, but this sequence should also have worked. I would not have bid 2 as south, the fourth trump is great but it's still a pretty normal drury. But I think once south bids only 3 over 3 (assuming that was NF), north really has to give up on slam.

 

So I go 85% north, 15% south.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The 2 bid is weird. The 4 bid is insane.

The king of spades is not a good card when partner is declaring a red 2-suiter. And with 3 bad diamonds...

 

edit: also, perhaps south should have jumped to 4 over 3 to show good trumps and out. I'm not sure if that's what it should show but it seems logical.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I don't like the 2 bid. Kxxx is nothing special, and regardless of what 2 meant (i think in many partnerships it has an artificial meaning but it was probably safe to assume it was 'natural' and, at least initially, a game try) 10xx in the suit is not what partner was looking for when he trotted it out.

 

So the partnership began careening off the rails at 2. I suspect that opener later inferred (by the time of the even less-palatable 4 bid) that he was facing a perfecto looking something like Axx Axxx QJx xxxx (if that's an opening, subtract the jack)or Axxx AQxx xx xxx or somesuch.

 

To me, the partnership was committed to game by the time North bid 3 (altho I concede that I might have a smidgeon of doubt as S) and thus I would interprete 3 as forward-going, not as an attempt to slow the auction down.

 

But even if it were intended by S as an attempt to slow down, and thus 4 became an enormous slam try....'I heard you try to play a partscore and I am still interested in slam'...the diamond holding is awful, the heart Q may not be full value....picture Jx KJxxxx AKJx A.....after the 2 call, this hand is worth one more try, I think....picture Axxx Axxx xx xxx to see why.

 

So I blame S 90%. I give N 10% for embarking on a subtle approach to an auction on which the pragmatic approach might have been to simply jump to 4 over drury, on the grounds that S needs a perfecto to make slam and trying to find out may result in misunderstandings, as apparently happened.

 

There is a reason why many first-time partneships between true experts result in great results...each strives to keep it simple and to make life easy for the other. That would have been a good approach for N on this hand.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I don't like the 2 bid. Kxxx is nothing special, and regardless of what 2 meant (i think in many partnerships it has an artificial meaning but it was probably safe to assume it was 'natural' and, at least initially, a game try) 10xx in the suit is not what partner was looking for when he trotted it out.

Assuming 2 is drury, then 2 has to be artificial. It is not playable to use 2 as natural in conjunction with the drury convention.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Agree with mikeh.

 

The main problem is just that South bid too much, starting with 2. Even if you routinely open with a balanced 11, that doesn't mean a balanced 9 is a maximum in support of hearts. South could have a shortage or a decent side suit for example so North was entitled to think South might have a suitable hand for slam. South should just bid 2 over 2 and could then happily and blamelessly cooperate fully if North had a better hand and still wanted to try for slam.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

At least in the US, it's fine to assume drury with a random expert. I suspect Cascade even knows this and is just being difficult :)

 

1. There is nothing in the opening post that made me suspect the hand was from the US

 

2. It could well have been from online. My first thought was "real expert" or "BBO expert" - and I wasn't thinking Fred

 

3. If Drury is mutually assumed then it is an agreement. No agreements is quite different than no discussion

 

4. The auction did not seem to have any explicit suit agreement

 

5. With really "no agreements" I would have no idea what most of south's bids meant and some of north's. Seriously starting with 2 but also 2 looks strange as does going past 4 with a 9 count and then bidding 5 in response to a presumed Blackwood.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I suspect South meant 2 as a help-suit game try and viewed the 2-3 sequence as a counter try, expecting opener to jump to 3 immediately with a slam try. So after he rejected and partner continued on with 4 he thought "wow, partner knows I have no diamond help and is off the AQ of trumps and is still trying for slam?" That might explain the 4 call, and it would be reasonable to charge North with some blame for muddling the auction with 2.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

At least in the US, it's fine to assume drury with a random expert. I suspect Cascade even knows this and is just being difficult :)

 

It would be nice to be able to bid 3 over 2 to show a 5-5 slam try, but this sequence should also have worked. I would not have bid 2 as south, the fourth trump is great but it's still a pretty normal drury. But I think once south bids only 3 over 3 (assuming that was NF), north really has to give up on slam.

 

So I go 85% north, 15% south.

 

 

I suspect you would need to run a poll before you make any blanket statement about using drury. Lite openers don't need Drury because they already opened the hand in first or second seat. Consequently 3rd and 4th seat openers need FULL normal opening values.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Don't like 2 or 4. Agree with mikeh that simple would have been good.

 

 

 

 

Wot?

 

I am objecting to the assumption that any random expert should be expected to use drury. As far as the hand goes, IMO not making a 4 card limit raise is just asking for trouble.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The 2 bid is weird. The 4 bid is insane.

The king of spades is not a good card when partner is declaring a red 2-suiter. And with 3 bad diamonds...

 

edit: also, perhaps south should have jumped to 4 over 3 to show good trumps and out. I'm not sure if that's what it should show but it seems logical.

 

I agree with this, I don't know it 2 is that wrong, other options are 2 and 3 neither of wich are very attractive althou probably better.

 

4 is totally insane, partner has diamonds you have an awful hand for slam.

 

North has the blame of not understanding that 3 was a minimum bid, and slam after that is not a good bet, but anyway 4 is the big bad bid on this auction.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Tough hand though. Interchange S's minor suits, and the slam's on the spade hook.

 

I'm not sure where this auction becomes GF with a random, but I'd really like it if opener taking 2 bids in a suit other than hearts put us in a game force. In other words, I don't want 3H NF.

 

If 3H is NF, more blame goes to N (than if 3H is F ), but in either case, I think S should see how bad Dxxx is going to be here and bid 4H over 4C.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I am objecting to the assumption that any random expert should be expected to use drury. As far as the hand goes, IMO not making a 4 card limit raise is just asking for trouble.

No you're not. You were saying that if you open light, you need FULL OPENING VALUES for 3/4 seats.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

No you're not. You were saying that if you open light, you need FULL OPENING VALUES for 3/4 seats.

 

This should be logically deducible. You don't need an even lighter opening call in 3rd and 4th seat. Your bidding efforts should be limited to getting a positive score otherwise there is no point in opening. Consequently passed hands in first and second seat don't need to use Drury they already know you have full values or you would have passed.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

gwnn playing with cloned gwnn:

 

1-2

2-2

4

 

regardless of what people here say, the two experts in this hand understood each other regarding 2. that's what matters. peace and harmony

Agree with the sequence between you and your clone. It should be very simple.

 

I am not sure about your statement regarding the actual interpretation of 2. It is possible that:

1: normal opening

2: intended as drury but undiscussed

2: natural (took 2 as natural)

2: game try (took 2 as showing full opener)

3: natural (took 2 as natural, probably forgot partner was passed hand at this point)

3: sign-off (took 3 as counter game-try)

4: DEFINITELY forgot partner has passed initially (and probably didn't view 3 as NF)

4: excited by 4 and proceeded to overbid the hand AGAIN

And the wheel went past the point of no return...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It would be nice if there was a consensus of all the follow-ups from Drury, similar to what MikeH did for reverses a few years ago.

 

Playing with my clone, I think the auction should be: (but I do not know if I would perpetuate it)

 

 

--------(pass)

1 - 2

3 - 3

3 - 3N

4 - 4

pass

 

3 - 5-5 slam try

3 - non-serious (in context)

3N - spade cue (perhaps dubious with the K)

4 - denies a diamond card.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It would be nice if there was a consensus of all the follow-ups from Drury, similar to what MikeH did for reverses a few years ago.

 

Playing with my clone, I think the auction should be: (but I do not know if I would perpetuate it)

 

 

--------(pass)

1 - 2

3 - 3

3 - 3N

4 - 4

pass

 

3 - 5-5 slam try

3 - non-serious (in context)

3N - spade cue (perhaps dubious with the K)

4 - denies a diamond card.

I think the main obstacle to that idea is that there are a multitude of drury schemes: I play 3 different ones currently and two others in previous partnerships. Moreover, there is a difference of opinion about 2 way drury (Fred G., amongst other experts, is strongly against 2-way while many other experienced players like it a lot). Even amongst 2-way players, some use 2 for 3 and 2 for 4 card support while others reverse that.

 

FWIW, my 'basic' one way drury looks like this:

 

2: invitational raise in the major, 3+ support

After 1 2:

 

Opener:

 

2: I either have a 4 card major or I am about to make a short suit gametry.

2: natural, heart length, promises 5+ spades, F1, game interest (natural gt)

2: drop dead: please don't even think about bidding again

2N: 17-19, gf, usually 5332, could be 4333 with chunky spades and 18-19.

3minor: natural help suit gt

3: 5-5 or better, strong slam try

3: strongest bid: slam try, demands cuebids (3N no Ace)

4new suit: undiscussed (suggestion: strong slam try with void)

 

1 2 2:

 

2: natural, 5+ hearts, says nothing about strength, but responder didn't fit jump

2: normal action if prepared to play 4-3 fit

2N: balanced 10-11 hcp, 3 spades

 

Over 1 opening, same scheme applies, but we don't have the intermediate bid available between opener's 2 and 2 major.

 

Note that the natural game tries may, by later bids, become natural long suit slam tries and generally responder should cue on the way to game if accepting such a gametry. Thus with AKQxx xx AKxxx x, I'd bid 3 ostensibly a gt and partner won't bid 4, accepting the gt if he holds a side Ace...he'd cue 4 or 4 (3 would be a counter game try.....when opener has 2 suits in which he needs help, he bids the cheaper, and responder, with no help for that suit but help for a higher suit (biddable below 3M) can bid that suit. Opposite my example 5251 hand, if responder held say xxxx Axx Qx Axx, he'd bid 4 over 3 and 4 over opener's subsequent 4 and slam would be reached).

 

I don't usually play this scheme, btw ;)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2: drop dead: please don't even think about bidding again

 

I have little idea about Mike's psyching tendancies but if this method is used in conjunction with a psychic 3rd seat opening then it seems that the method is illegal.

 

Psychic controls (Includes ANY partnership agreement which, if used in

conjunction with a psychic call, makes allowance for that psych.)

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...