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After a trap pass


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Is it really that good? Yes, your club suit and aces are nice, but the Q has a good chance to be worthless since spades were bid on your left. LHO is unlimited, and partner probably has mostly red cards and a relatively weak hand sitting in front of opener. And opener's strength is mostly in partner's suits.

 

If partner has perfect cards you may be able to make 3NT. I wouldn't give it good odds, though.

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Is it really that good? Yes, your club suit and aces are nice, but the Q has a good chance to be worthless since spades were bid on your left. LHO is unlimited, and partner probably has mostly red cards and a relatively weak hand sitting in front of opener. And opener's strength is mostly in partner's suits.

 

If partner has perfect cards you may be able to make 3NT. I wouldn't give it good odds, though.

I intended this to be a question about expert bidding methods, not a "you hold" problem. Most of the people I've asked use a delayed cue bid to show opener's suit but none have any specific agreements about length, strength, or continuations.

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I intended this to be a question about expert bidding methods, not a "you hold" problem. Most of the people I've asked use a delayed cue bid to show opener's suit but none have any specific agreements about length, strength, or continuations.

A delayed 2-level cuebid is like you normally make a 2-level overcall. A jump shows a stronger hand. It doesn't get more specific than that I guess.

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It depends what an immediate 2 and 3 would have been. I think (American) standard has become that an immediate 2 is Michaels and 3 is weak. Then a delayed 2 overcall is a normal 2 level overcall. That does not leave much for a delayed 3 other than a stronger club overcall, as rare as that might be. The older way of playing was for an immediate 3 to be intermediate, something like a normal club overcall. Then a delayed 2 needs to be something else, whether stronger, weaker or a 2-suited takeout of some sort. Some pairs play different methods here depending on the length promised by the 1 opening. In particular, several countries play an immediate 2 as Michaels as standard with a natural 2 overall. Again, this has a knock-on effect to the delayed 2. So the basic answer is that "expert standard" varies depending on which country the expert comes from.
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As this is not posted in the experts forum, I feel entitled to make a comment!

Certainly standard here is immediate = Michaels, delayed = natural, but if the club could be short, as I guess is the case, my preference is for an immediate X to say "I would have opened that". We then play system on, ie transfer walsh, so that copes well in finding major fits when it also acts like a normal takeout double. In this case, my rebid is 2 to deny a potential major fit (if partner showed one) and to show 6 clubs. Seems right to me.

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