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Dealing with Interference


  

25 members have voted

  1. 1. Your bid after (P) 1D (3C) ?

    • X
      11
    • 3D
      1
    • 3H
      1
    • 3N
      12
    • Other (please specify)
      0
  2. 2. You bid 3N and partner responds 4N (quant slam invite). Your call?

    • Abstain - I think 3N is so bad I can't consider this question
      1
    • Pass
      12
    • 6D
      6
    • 6H
      0
    • 6N
      0
    • Other (please specify)
      6


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What are 5x bids after your 4NT, besides a way to make partner wonder if maybe you forgot and are responding to keycard?

 

5/5/5 show a quant accept with 0/1/2 aces as a way to get out at 5N in case we somehow are off two.

 

5 is quant accept but would normally inquire about playing a minor suit slam. We've only discussed this after "pure" NT auctions (1N-4N, 2N-4N, etc.) so not sure this would apply here. Maybe it should as a way to bring a diamond slam back into the picture.

 

I didn't include these as poll options because I thought they would be non-standard. But per our agreements the quant accept shoudl show aces at the 5-level rather than bid 6N directly as suggested in the poll.

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IMO 4NT must be 18-19 balanced, and I would pass it, if partner has shortness he should bid 4m instead of 4NT.

 

EDIT: I though that 31/32 combined should not play slam at first, but thinking deeper, the preempt is giving us info, and we have a fit to develop an extra trick, so 6 is better than I though at first. Still too many jacks for my taste.

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3NT and pass. I don't think X is bad, if partner bids 4 I'll bid 5. But I'll risk missing a 4-4 heart fit for putting us in the most likely best contract. Plus, matchpoints, come on :P

 

I think moving over 4NT is very close. I agree with Fluffy that 4NT is 18-19 bal since 4 and 4/4 are certainly forcing and slammish here. I'm a little worried about the position of the cards in 6 despite the extra info from the preempt. Besides, with a passed partner RHO could have all the missing high cards or could be honor-7th of clubs and a stiff and out. If forced to bid slam I would rather bid 6NT to protect my holdings and since there's a chance LHO is void in clubs. If partner's spade holding is bad enough that we would need spade ruffs, hopefully we'll have enough tricks in the other 3 suits (maybe aim for 2 spades, 3 hearts, 5 diamonds, 2 clubs)

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On a free run type of 1nt - 4nt quantitative auction we have the agreement to respond straight Aces when accepting followed by 4 card suits up the line untiul we land.

 

Maybe that gets you to 6 here when pard is 4-5 in the reds but that's a huge stretch and I'm sure I am landing in 6 losing a spade and a red card?

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[hv=pc=n&e=s92hkj86dkj73caj5&d=s&v=b&b=7&a]133|200[/hv]

 

Matchpoints. Both vul. South deals.

 

Two questions in poll...

bd71.....

1) What was partner's hand ??

 

2) One unconventional (unorthodox ) bidding treatment for this awkward situation for Responder is as follows ( by agreement ):

3S = 5+ cards

Neg X = at all levels ( with appropriate values ) promises 4 cards , but says nothing about

3H = 4+

 

Thus, in this situation:

 

(p) - 1D - ( 3C ) - 3H

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