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What do I do now?


FM75

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[hv=pc=n&e=sajt95ht9873dckt4&d=s&v=0&b=11&a=1s2d3c]133|200[/hv]

Both Vulnerable

 

I am actually sitting West here. Vulnerable, I should have the values for my bid. What should my partner do?

 

We ended up -12 imps in a team game on this hand, though the bidding was considerably different at the other table.

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ROFL at squirrel. :)

 

Maybe I should not have mentioned that we were -12 imps on this. Perhaps it was more pertinent that the team match occurred in BIL.

 

My partner and I are a new partnership trying to learn precision, not that precision matters on this auction.

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This is truly a non-problem if E simply thinks about what is going on.

 

He certainly cannot make a natural bid, holding a void in partner's suit and a 10xxxx heart suit and minimal values.

 

A double, for penalty, may seem to have something going for it, but a moment's thought shows why that is an illusion.

 

For one thing, E has no assurance that he can set 3...what if his partner's clubs look like his diamonds?

 

Far more to the point is that the auction is not over. If he thinks he can double the opps in something, why not wait until the next round to do so? And even then would be premature if the opps are still in a forcing auction.

 

Btw, I wouldn't double 3N here. We have zero communication with partner and the opps may be able to run 5 or 6 club tricks, so wouldn't need much on the side to wrap it up.

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I agree with all of the above with the possible exception that I may well double 3nt if they bid it if there is even the slightest thought/reluctance.

 

Even with a smooth 3nt bid I only risk 4 imps IF they can sit and make it, (I can't imagine overtricks) and I might chase them into something I can really hammer.

 

Whadya think Mike?

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I agree with all of the above with the possible exception that I may well double 3nt if they bid it if there is even the slightest thought/reluctance.

 

Even with a smooth 3nt bid I only risk 4 imps IF they can sit and make it, (I can't imagine overtricks) and I might chase them into something I can really hammer.

 

Whadya think Mike?

If LHO is bidding 3N, and that seems most plausible.....our major holdings suggest he probably lacks a 6th spade or a 4th heart, and our minor holdings suggest he is likely to have at least length, if not strength, in diamonds.....and we double, we are getting a diamond lead for sure. I mean, even if partner's diamonds are weakish, to the point that he might consider another lead, our double is a strong suggestion to lead diamonds...we'd typically hold Hx and some scattered cards including a club stop or two.

 

And if there is one thing that we can say with some confidence it is that unless partner had very good diamonds, we don't want him to lead that suit.

 

Not only is he likely giving away a trick, unless he has very good diamonds, but he is possibly yielding a tempo (often critical when, as here, we will often hold only a single stop in their main source of tricks) and our void will tell dealer more than we'd like him to know about our hand, especially after we double and place some hcp for him.

 

While I agree that the cost of a double will usually be low, if they were always making, my fears are:

 

1. we increase the odds of their making by doubling, for the reasons above

2. it is not normal for the opps to run...and if they do maybe they run from a failing 3N to a making 4...i agree...that isn't at all likely, but neither is the chance that your speculatve double will cause them to run

3. it strikes me as improbable that they are going for their life. It's not as if we are cashing a lot of winners in our hand, and we seem to have a slight problem helping partner out in the diamond department.

 

So the downside may be modest, apart from (1) but the upside even more so.

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Partner passed. Opener apparently did not consider 3 to be forcing. So it was passed around to me:

 

[hv=pc=n&w=sk3haq52dat942c76&d=s&v=b&b=7&a=1s2d3cpp]133|200[/hv]

 

I could not find a way not to pass.

 

Unfortunately I did find a way to take one too few tricks. At the other table EW bid unopposed to 4 making - though on the layout it was cold for 6. My teammate South passed a 13 count 5=3=3=2 hand!

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Partner passed. Opener apparently did not consider 3 to be forcing. So it was passed around to me:

 

[hv=pc=n&w=sk3haq52dat942c76&d=s&v=b&b=7&a=1s2d3cpp]133|200[/hv]

 

I could not find a way not to pass.

 

Unfortunately I did find a way to take one too few tricks. At the other table EW bid unopposed to 4 making - though on the layout it was cold for 6. My teammate South passed a 13 count 5=3=3=2 hand!

 

If that was NF in their system, or if the opener thought it was, he shd have alerted it. Then your pd, knowing that 3 is a neg free bid, would take an action. Your pd has a pretty strong case to call TD imo even if you yourself didnt call already.

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IMO, the posting of the actual West hand was not helpful to the thread's discussion. It isn't a hand where the given auction would occur. "IMO" means just that. If you agree with the 2D overcall instead of a double, fine; however, the thread does self-explain why I disagree.
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IMO, the posting of the actual West hand was not helpful to the thread's discussion. It isn't a hand where the given auction would occur. "IMO" means just that. If you agree with the 2D overcall instead of a double, fine; however, the thread does self-explain why I disagree.

 

2D on this tacky suit with a good 4 card H suit on the side is a very poor bid. Sorry but this is not an "interesting" bridge hand and should have been posted in the new beginners forum instead.

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2 instead of double is not that bad if you follow it with a TO double of 3.

 

However......

 

You were clearly jobbed by the failure to alert the non-forcing 3 call and would have won any Director or committee ruling.

 

Yes it is that bad, and you are not worth a double of 3C.

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I agree with all of the above with the possible exception that I may well double 3nt if they bid it if there is even the slightest thought/reluctance.

 

This was played online, though, so you will not be able to pick up any of this.

 

You were clearly jobbed by the failure to alert the non-forcing 3 call and would have won any Director or committee ruling.

 

Are these available on BBO?

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Partner passed. Opener apparently did not consider 3 to be forcing.

It sounds like south just didn't know what he was doing. Occasionally bad calls by bad players get good results, that is part of bridge and isn't going away.

 

Perhaps too, south did know what he was doing, and NS had an undisclosed agreement that 3 is nonforcing. Perhaps he deliberately withheld the alert. Or perhaps that treatment is so common where he is from that he thought no alert was needed. Or perhaps he has no idea what an alert even is ... etc. On BBO all these things happen and there is little to do but get used to it.

 

At the other table EW bid unopposed to 4 making - though on the layout it was cold for 6. My teammate South passed a 13 count 5=3=3=2 hand!

So it is safe to say your bad result was due as much to your teammate as to anything opponents did.

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It sounds like south just didn't know what he was doing. Occasionally bad calls by bad players get good results, that is part of bridge and isn't going away.

 

..snip...

 

So it is safe to say your bad result was due as much to your teammate as to anything opponents did.

 

This was a friendly team match. The "TD" was my teammate sitting south :) Blaming a teammate would be easy, but this sort of thing (minus the 3 clubs forcing part) might have just as easily arisen in pairs.

 

I was looking for some possible argument/bidding that finds the fit, that makes sense. One person suggested a double on my part instead of a 2 diamond overcall. I considered that, but with a doubleton in the other black suit and a hand not suitable for double followed by a bid of my own suit, both for strength and self-sufficient suit purposes, I chose to overcall. Maybe that was wrong, but I think the argument that a double shows a major (which happened to be the one my partner had) seems to be resulting a bit.

 

Should the West hand bid? I think so, because I tend to bid whenever there is reasonable justification for it. Not sure how teammate downgraded her hand to unworthy of opening - maybe a lack of quick tricks. But not bidding the South hand pretty much left the partnership defenseless. - Yes, I am resulting here. :)

 

Perhaps this is just another "that is just bridge" story. I was just wondering if either my partner or I missed some reasonable (perhaps complex) inference that would have supported a different action on our part.

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One person suggested a double on my part instead of a 2 diamond overcall. I considered that, but with a doubleton in the other black suit and a hand not suitable for double followed by a bid of my own suit

 

A useful treatment you might consider is "same level conversion". It works like this: If you double and partner bids some number of , when you remove to you do NOT promise extra values (hence the same level), just a side order of .

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