Phil Posted November 25, 2010 Report Share Posted November 25, 2010 In all this back-and-forth, I still do not know what Han would bid here, but I appreciate his ambivalence. If he doubles, I await his continuations over a 2♥ response from partner. The idea about inviting is sound however, we are very awkwardly placed in this not-so-unlikely case. Mike, how many of your 65 cases had partner rebidding 2♥? Sarcasm aside, I think this is a very tough hand, but I've always liked the pass / 2♠ over a double approach, and I strongly disagree that partner will have a harder time deciding what to do if we take this route as compared to anything else, since this is a great description. Having said that I realize that I am in really bad shape if LHO raises to 2♠ by passing initially. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mikeh Posted November 25, 2010 Report Share Posted November 25, 2010 Having said that I realize that I am in really bad shape if LHO raises to 2♠ by passing initially. Are you? Is double purely penalty? I can't see that as a useful treatment, given that there has been a raise. I would see this hand-type as far more relevant: not necessarily 4=3=3=3...what would we be bidding with 3=3=4=3 and the same values? It seems to me that if we knew LHO was raising to 2♠, we might well prefer pass to double....we surely don't want to encourage partner to bid aggressively with 4 hearts on such hands....and won't he bid aggressively with a stiff or void spade? On the actual hand, of course, an aggressive approach by him in hearts works very well, but on the actual hand, the odds of a raise by LHO seem low....LHO will almost always have a very flat weak hand with, in all likelihood, a poor 3 card spade holding. As for how many hands, in my simulation, bid 2♥, I can't say....I was in a bit of a hurry and didn't look at that nor did I save my sample. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Phil Posted November 25, 2010 Report Share Posted November 25, 2010 Are you? Is double purely penalty? I can't see that as a useful treatment, given that there has been a raise. I would see this hand-type as far more relevant: not necessarily 4=3=3=3...what would we be bidding with 3=3=4=3 and the same values? It seems to me that if we knew LHO was raising to 2♠, we might well prefer pass to double....we surely don't want to encourage partner to bid aggressively with 4 hearts on such hands....and won't he bid aggressively with a stiff or void spade? On the actual hand, of course, an aggressive approach by him in hearts works very well, but on the actual hand, the odds of a raise by LHO seem low....LHO will almost always have a very flat weak hand with, in all likelihood, a poor 3 card spade holding. As for how many hands, in my simulation, bid 2♥, I can't say....I was in a bit of a hurry and didn't look at that nor did I save my sample. Without any type of advanced discussion, I would think pass/double is penalty. I hope no one suggests "pard can figure it out" because in every case pard will have short spades. Pass/double to show this hand type is a little weird but useful here, but I would say that it is more useful to play x as 2353 type hands that have no useful bid over 1♠, especially since when partner has very short spades a lot of the time he can find a x over 2♠ himself. While we are at it, what's 2N after 2♠? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mikestar13 Posted November 26, 2010 Report Share Posted November 26, 2010 2♠ is the best of of bad lot--partner will likely bid NT with a ♠ stop. I hate 4-3s when short hand has no ruffs, 5♣ seems to unlikely opposite this shapeless mess. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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