Free Posted December 7, 2010 Report Share Posted December 7, 2010 His partner's bid has said "I'm not going to ask you which major you hold, because it's more important for me to tell you I have diamonds". In that context, why would you bid a major your partner doesn't want to know about, rather than supporting his minor?Because he's probably void in one of the Majors and expects you to hold that suit based on percentages. That doesn't mean you always hold that particular Major (2♦-2♠ P/C isn't always passed out either), and IF you happen the have the OM you might be going for grand slam very easily. Say you have KJxx-void-AKJxxx-Axx and partner opens 2♦ multi. You expect partner to have ♥ so bidding 2NT won't give you any useful information. But what if partner happens to have AQxxxx-xxx-Qxx-x or AQxxxx-xxx-Qx-xx? If he supports ♦ then what is your ♠KJxx worth? If opener rebids his Major first, with or without ♦ fit, then you can valuate your hand much better. 3♦ doesn't say he's not interested in your Major, it merely says he thinks he knows which one I hold (and is not interested in that one) so the responses over 2NT won't be as helpful as describing his own hand first most of the time. Responder usually won't have a void in both Majors. There is something to be said to support ♦ with a good holding, but then you still need to be able to find the Major fit. See the above example, if the auction would go 2♦-3♦-4♦-4♠, what does it mean? I'm pretty sure most people won't have detailed agreements on such sequences. I've been playing multi for years, have detailed agreements about lots of auctions, but I've never made any agreements like this and it has never come up either! That's why I think it's quite logical to show the Major anyway. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
phil_20686 Posted December 7, 2010 Report Share Posted December 7, 2010 It does seem a bit absurd to decide that partner cannot bid 3d with x Axx AKJTxxx Kx because if he does partner is not allowed to bid his heart suit? Surely 3H over 3d is just normal. If partner bids 3N then I can bid 4d. Moreover, partner should always basically have a GF hand here. If he had an invitational hand with support for one major he would probably have either bid 2N or bid 2M P/c planning to invite if partner had the other one. Bidding diamonds before raising your major might just be a way to help you evaulate your hand for slam. Not sure whar agreements you have but with:Axx Axx AKxxxx x or something you would surely start with 3d on your way to making a slam try in the major. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mycroft Posted December 7, 2010 Report Share Posted December 7, 2010 I'm still confused, all ye 3D "bid your major in case I have it" people, at what you do after 2D-X-3D-p; 3H-p-4H-p; 5D?Or do you pass 4H with the opener's hand and potentially miss 6D? How do you tell when partner has the OPs hand and when he has xxx KJxxxx x Kxx? or xxx KQxxxx x xxx? I do realize I come from the "multi is impossible to defend against" part of the world, so I don't have experience answering exactly these questions. [Edit - removed 14th card] Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bluejak Posted December 10, 2010 Report Share Posted December 10, 2010 Will someone explain this to me, because I do not understand it. On a sequence [does not matter which] a player, in a position where playing in a minor is very rare, makes a natural forcing bid of 3♦. Partner, who has shown nothing in the suit [could be void] has Kxx and a singleton elsewhere. In what circumstances do you not raise? Looks blood Red to me. Ok, there are other possibilities, as Jeffrey mentions, as to whether it is a psyche or not, but when a player fields an apparent psyche, and his partner said "I psyched", I reckon Red psyche. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gordontd Posted December 10, 2010 Report Share Posted December 10, 2010 There is something to be said to support ♦ with a good holding, but then you still need to be able to find the Major fit. You make a forcing enquiry, and if partner turns out to have the major for which you don't have support, then you bid your diamonds. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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