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Weirdest/worst agreements you've encountered at the table?


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Pretty sure they had a conventional 2NT rebid over 1m-1M; right? His point was that they played 2 as 18-19 balanced but they didn't use this for their advantage in their 1m auctions.

oh right! I guess they did do that, yes.

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I have met several players who insist that as responder, I should bid and rebid a five card major, because the first bid only showed four.

 

I suspect this makes more sense from old people from local cllubs who do not shuffle boards properly, for them 5 card suit is a biggie

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  • 2 weeks later...

Not the worst agreement, but certainly the worst bid I do remember ever.

[hv=pc=n&s=sjhkqj52dj763c873&w=sk62hat3da2cakt65&n=sq73h876dt85cq942&e=sat9854h94dkq94cj&d=s&v=0&b=11&a=2hdp2sp4sp4np5cp6sp7sppp]399|300[/hv]

 

When this kid of thing happens it is surprising how often the contract has play. But with such a bidding opponent's lacked the skill to make it.

 

BTW, before bidding 2 RHO bid an insufficent 1 just to make things a bit more bizarre.

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  • 1 month later...

Comedy gold..

 

I open 1C sitting east with some decently strong hand. Partner(west) replies 1H, followed by north bidding 2H with some 9-11 HCP hand and AQxxx in hearts. Knowing the two players, this is natural. With Kxx in hearts and the opps red vs. our white, I double. After south takes 15 seconds to find a pass card, my partner goes to 3C. This is when North finds the 3H card, followed by my 2nd double.

 

5 down for -1400. The true comedy begins when north decides to explain to his partner loudly that her passing my double was an absolutely HORRIBLE bid!

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A few weeks ago I met a pair who played 1-(1)-1 as non forcing. I found that out because it continued pass-pass (and it was not a mistake/psyche/whatever).

 

On the next board (of the 2 board round) we bid Pass-1; 2-4. When the dummy came down they told me that I should have alerted 2 "because it could be as short as three cards". (We play 5 card majors, not alertable.)

 

Rik

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A few weeks ago I met a pair who played 1-(1)-1 as non forcing. I found that out because it continued pass-pass (and it was not a mistake/psyche/whatever).

That's how I learned to play, too, from my parents (in the early 2000's! not in the interwar years). Strong hands should start with a double, or maybe a cuebid. It was never really explained to me what the difference was.

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A few weeks ago I met a pair who played 1-(1)-1 as non forcing. I found that out because it continued pass-pass (and it was not a mistake/psyche/whatever).

 

On the next board (of the 2 board round) we bid Pass-1; 2-4. When the dummy came down they told me that I should have alerted 2 "because it could be as short as three cards". (We play 5 card majors, not alertable.)

 

Rik

The first sentence just sounds like a negative free bid. Certainly not earth shattering, but clearly an unusual treatment (whether they know it or not).

 

As for the second sentence, that is funny. Even in old-fashioned Goren with 4-card majors one would often raise on 3 card support.

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The first sentence just sounds like a negative free bid. Certainly not earth shattering, but clearly an unusual treatment (whether they know it or not).

 

As for the second sentence, that is funny. Even in old-fashioned Goren with 4-card majors one would often raise on 3 card support.

Negative free bids on the 1-level are very unusual and almost earth shattering.

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I saw (3H)-4C as takeout, duly passed out with a hand (I think) 5-2 in the minors, dummy saying afterwards not 'sorry pd I forgot' but 'I was too weak to bid my diamonds' :o
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One of my partners likes playing against weak 2/:

x=11-15, 4(5) in other major

dbl=11-15, 3- other major

3=16+, 4+ other major

3=16+, 3- other major

 

Ingenious. But what does he do if he has a bidding box with only one kind of double card in it?

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Ingenious. But what does he do if he has a bidding box with only one kind of double card in it?

You got me in fits reading this. :) I must go and look if I can gippo a bidding box and then make sure I am sitting N/S in a Mitchell movement or the sitting pair in a Howell movement. :rolleyes: Then I can use this as well (or some variation of it). :D

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