Jump to content

2H pass 4H


gnasher

Recommended Posts

I'll pass and hope to go plus. I have reasonable defense that it's not clear (or necessarily likely) that 4 is making. Additionally, I don't have so many controls or shape that I'm confident of making anything above 4. It may be the low road, but I'll just try to take a plus here, at any form of scoring.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I also pass, perhaps we can set them by scoring a trick with each one of our control cards. Perhaps 5x gets killed. Worse yet, perhaps 5X is a costly phantom.

 

Sure we can have a good save in 5X but I think the odds favor a pass.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I am much less confident then the rest to get four tricks. Even if rho has the missing aces, why shold they need to lead both black suits, so that I can come to both of my kings?

 

I had bid 5 .

 

This is a loosing position on the actual deal and a minority view in the thread- maybe this should teach me something. :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

If pass didn't work well in a forum event, oh well. Resulting a board won't change my mind.

 

If one of the members of the JEC team took a different action which worked, touche. Sometimes great players make lucky mistakes.

 

The bidding was different at our table.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I also think this is closer than the poll suggest, bidding on has 3 ways to win (make, sacrifice and push them)

 

This is always true when the choice is whether to bid something or pass. I guess it's a good argument for bidding in close situations in general. However you lost me here:

 

and pass, when wins, will win very little.

 

If this was true I guess I would always bid. However going down even 300 when you could have gone +100 is a 10 imp loss. Obviously the reason to pass on hands that have a lot of defense and not that much offense is because you risk a phantom sacrifice which is very costly. If we thought 4H would always be cold then bidding would be good whenever we had good offense, but that is also obvious.

 

The reason to pass is even when you make something you might well get to the wrong spot, when you bid 5D you risk going for a large number even when they are cold, and most importantly when you are beating them and not making it will be costly, it won't be "winning very little"

 

Imagine if partner just has a stiff diamond and a bad hand, obviously that would be a worst case scenario but we will go for a really large number instead of going plus.

 

In general when you have good chances to beat them and not that great of a chance to make, bidding is a bad idea since phantoming is very very bad (even -100 into +100 is a medium sized loss). I am not trying to say that bidding does not have good upside, if they are cold and we hit a big fit we might find a good save, we might make, etc.

 

However, it's just about figuring out how likely these scenarios are, which is obviously hard to quanitfy, but imo passing is pretty clear. Maybe I am too optimistic bout our D and too pessimistic about our O. That almost everyone in the thread advocates passing is not too surprising to me.

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I also think this is closer than the poll suggest, bidding on has 3 ways to win (make, sacrifice and push them)

 

This is always true when the choice is whether to bid something or pass. I guess it's a good argument for bidding in close situations in general. However you lost me here:

 

and pass, when wins, will win very little. As oposed to biddign with works very seldom but wins much more.

 

If this was true I guess I would always bid. However going down even 300 when you could have gone +100 is a 10 imp loss. Obviously the reason to pass on hands that have a lot of defense and not that much offense is because you risk a phantom sacrifice which is very costly. If we thought 4H would always be cold then bidding would be good whenever we had good offense, but that is also obvious.

 

The reason to pass is even when you make something you might well get to the wrong spot, when you bid 5D you risk going for a large number even when they are cold, and most importantly when you are beating them and not making it will be costly, it won't be "winning very little"

 

Imagine if partner just has a stiff diamond and a bad hand, obviously that would be a worst case scenario but we will go for a really large number instead of going plus.

 

In general when you have good chances to beat them and not that great of a chance to make, bidding is a bad idea since phantoming is very very bad (even -100 into +100 is a medium sized loss). I am not trying to say that bidding does not have good upside, if they are cold and we hit a big fit we might find a good save, we might make, etc.

 

However, it's just about figuring out how likely these scenarios are, which is obviously hard to quanitfy, but imo passing is pretty clear. Maybe I am too optimistic bout our D and too pessimistic about our O. That almost everyone in the thread advocates passing is not too surprising to me.

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Then, Gnasher's point in initiating this thread might be about how partner of the 2H bidder at one table dicked around and let them in cheaply ---or the disadvantages of playing multi when partner can't just jump raise as a preempt.

 

Yes at other table i bid 2NT instead of 4

 

It went

 

2-pass-2NT-DBL

4-4-pass- ?

 

Now what would you bid with this hand Andy gave ?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I would bid 3D after 2N.

If I doubled and heard 4 I would pass. I hope we can make it but partner won't like the dummy.

I wonder how much you would need to add to this hand to make it a bid after 4. I am thinking q is still easy pass. K is closer but still pass.

Add K and turn K in to A and we are talking.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

After 2-pass-4, I doubled, then converted 4 to 5. That's nearly always the same as overcalling 5, but with a slight chance that partner will pass the double or bid 5.

 

Nobody bid anything over that, and I got a good dummy but went down:

[hv=pc=n&s=sk9ha9daj9862ckj6&w=s5hkt8732dqcaqt32&n=sqjt743h6dk753c87&e=sa862hqj54dt4c954]399|300[/hv]

My action worked out badly in one way: if I'd passed, partner would have bid 4 all by himself, and I'd have been happy to leave him in it.

 

On the other hand, suppose South had competed to 5 (which I think he should do). In my auction, partner would have bid 5, obviously. In the auction where I pass:

2
pass 4
pass

pass 4
pass pass

5
pass pass

it's rather harder to bid 5.

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...