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Good hand at bridge last night...


RunemPard

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I bid it out of instinct...How would you go about finding the bid more accurately?

 

Bidding...

 

N----E----S----W

-----3D---3S---4D

5D---P----5H---P

7S---AP

 

I assumed my partner had 5 spades bidding over...so chose to risk it since we do not have cue conventions...I assumed my partner is showing me the K with his bid, understanding I am showing control of .

 

So...how can one more accurately attempt to find this? I thought about showing 6C, but worried my partner would not understand that I have already set as trump.

 

 

YOUR HAND (N)

 

: QJ9843

: AJ

: -

: AK974

 

PARTNER'S HAND (S)

 

: AK76

: KQ72

: Q43

: Q3

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South has a tough call in direct seat. 3NT seems obvious, but with 2 four card majors a double is not out of the question. I have to admit that 3 would never occur to me.

 

If South bids 3NT, North has a difficult problem. He is pretty sure that there is a slam (he only needs South to have Kx of spades to make a slam reasonable). The only obvious bid over 3NT is 4, intending to bid spades next. If West bids 4 over 3NT, North's options are even more limited. He might just shoot out 6, and then South has to decide whether to take the push to 7.

 

Your partner hit gold with his 3 call. If I were North, I would just bid out 5NT over 3 and take the chance that there is not a club loser.

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I think I'd X 3D, not liking Qxx too much as a stop. After West's 4D North bids... what?

 

5D? OK, so South bids 5H and then 5S, 6S. Nope.

 

Right, so what about if North doubles 4D. Then 4H from south. The problem here is that North's 4S sounds like it could be passed, although really it shouldn't be because with something like 5-6 in the black suits and a weakish hand North wouldn't X, he'd just pass or bid 4S or 5C. So South raises to 5S and North bids 5NT (GSF), South 7S (AK of trumps).

 

The problem comes if South raises 4S to 6S which he might well do with extras. But hopefully he won't do that, instead preferring keycard: 4NT-5NT (2 with a void)-6C (SQ?)-7S (yes, and my hand's too good to bother with any more of this nonsense).

 

ahydra

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The problem comes if South raises 4S to 6S which he might well do with extras. But hopefully he won't do that, instead preferring keycard: 4NT-5NT (2 with a void)-6C (SQ?)-7S (yes, and my hand's too good to bother with any more of this nonsense).

 

Hah...that is exactly what I took my jump to 7S as...except I just prayed he had the A of S or even better AK...

 

We really did not have any conventions about this, so I was just happy that he understood my 5D...

 

Thanks for the input all.

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The funny thing about this hand is...

 

About 2 months or so ago, playing against these same two players at our club during our 4-man competition, me and my beginner G/F reached a 7S contract that just should NOT be bid.

 

She understood my K reply incorrectly and thought we had all keys. Going up to 7S missing 2 kings!

 

Both K sit before her AQ in both suits and we pull off a beginner's luck GS for 16+ IMPs

 

Playing against these same two with my other partner...we reach another 7S based on hope and pull it off again.

 

The next day, after telling my G/F about the hand, we went to him together and said that we will no longer bid 7S against him.

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