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Matchpoints, unfavourable.

[hv=pc=n&s=saq984hkjdat9ckt3]133|100[/hv]

You choose to open a 15-17 NT (right?), and LHO chimes in with a natural 2 overcall. Partner bids 2, which is a signoff bid with five spades or more. RHO passes. What do you bid?

If you choose to pass, LHO bids 3 and RHO corrects to 3. What now?

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This is a very strong hand to be opening 1NT. I believe I would open 1. However, let's suppose I open 1NT, and it goes (2)-2-(Pass)-?

Surely I raise spades. We have a ten card fit. We will not be allowed to play this in 2. Despite the unfavorable vulnerability and the bad heart position, I would expect 3 to be a safe contract. Among other things, if they then go on to four of something partner will know that we have at least a nine card fit and will be able to figure we are not taking many spades on defense. He will do what is right. Or so we hope. But we will have provided him with the important features of our hand that will help him judge.

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Yes, this is an 18 and should have been opened 1.

 

Yes, once we did open 1NT, we must raise to 3.

 

However, if we were sitting in for someone who had passed or had used an unfortunate 2NT gadget allowing Lefty and Righty more opportunities, we have an entirely different concern.

We might as well bid 4, over their 3H, or PASS ---not 3; they are headed for a makeable 4H contract, and a pass might derail it.

 

BTW: thanks, Antrax, for the subtitle; we can avoid wasting our limited brainpower on some other possible agenda.

Edited by aguahombre
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[hv=pc=n&s=saq984hkjdat9ckt3]133|150| Antrax writes "Matchpoints, unfavourable. You choose to open a 15-17 NT (right?), and LHO chimes in with a natural 2 overcall. Partner bids 2, which is a signoff bid with five spades or more. RHO passes. What do you bid?

If you choose to pass, LHO bids 3 and RHO corrects to 3. What now?"

IMO ...

As opener, prefer 1 (10) to 1N (7), especially if playing Gazilli

After 2, prefer 3 (10) or 4 (9) to Pass (8)

After RHO's 3, prefer Pass (10) to 3 (8).

Raising (at any stage) is not necessarily the right tactic as it may jockey opponents into a making game. [/hv]

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Yes, this is an 18 and should have been opened 1.

 

Yes, once we did open 1NT, we must raise to 3.

 

However, if we were sitting in for someone who had passed or had used an unfortunate 2NT gadget allowing Lefty and Righty more opportunities, we have an entirely different concern.

We might as well bid 4, over their 3H, or PASS ---not 3; they are headed for a makeable 4H contract, and a pass might derail it.

 

BTW: thanks, Antrax, for the subtitle; we can avoid wasting our limited brainpower on some other possible agenda.

 

Unfortunate 2NT gadget?

I am curious as to how you would get pd to bid 3NT with. Perhaps you would like to try 4S?

Kxxxxx

xx

Kxx

xx

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Unfortunate 2NT gadget?

I am curious as to how you would get pd to bid 3NT with. Perhaps you would like to try 4S?

Kxxxxx

xx

Kxx

xx

I don't refer to other people's toys as good, bad etc. I just know why we don't use them. In the OP case it allows the opponents room when we already know the auction is competitive. There certainly are specific hands where your methods work better than this one, and so "unfortunate" is the correct term.

 

Without competition the 2nt call would have much merit as 2M+1 in a transfer sequence. Our partnership chooses to adapt to the circumstances. But it is all moot here, because of the questionable choice to not open 1S with an 18.

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Yeah, I'll open another thread about my choice of opening bid.

I like the explanation of several posters here that 3 is like a super-accept to a transfer. I'll discuss it with partner - we never thought about continuations after a "signoff" bid.

 

Not sure if the complete hand is interesting - at the table I only bid 3 over 3, LHO bumped to 4, partner doubled on QTxx and a side Q and they went for 800 on a spade lead - dummy was 2=2=3=6.

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Not sure if the complete hand is interesting - at the table I only bid 3 over 3, LHO bumped to 4, partner doubled on QTxx and a side Q and they went for 800 on a spade lead - dummy was 2=2=3=6.
Yes please, Antrax. The full hand would be interesting :)
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[hv=pc=n&s=saq984hkjdat9ckt3&w=sjha9652dkq65ca62&n=st7532hqt43d87cq9&e=sk6h87dj432cj8754&d=s&v=n&b=15&a=1n2h2spp3dp3h3s4hxppp]399|300[/hv]

 

The EW pair, BTW, scored 59.71% in that round and placed second overall with 61.09% after three rounds, so I guess their bidding is tailored to the level of the opposition.

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[hv=pc=n&s=saq984hkjdat9ckt3&w=sjha9652dkq65ca62&n=st7532hqt43d87cq9&e=sk6h87dj432cj8754&d=s&v=n&b=15&a=1n2h2spp3dp3h3s4hxppp]399|300[/hv]

 

The EW pair, BTW, scored 59.71% in that round and placed second overall with 61.09% after three rounds, so I guess their bidding is tailored to the level of the opposition.

Your opps may have scored well in the round and in the event, but East's heart preference and West's game bid are two of the oddest actions I have seen in some time.

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I agree with Art, and probably with everyone else, that the EW bidding is incomprehensible. Did you happen to notice if there were any 620s your way? Not likely to be bid but the fact that there are ten tricks in spades would appear to be a pretty good argument for an immediate raise of 2 to 3.

 

To go further into the fantasy world, it's possible that after West's extravagant bidding that North would decide West must be void in spades and run the ten. Oops. Nah.

 

Anyway, I don't care how the EW pair placed, their bidding is nuts. I believe in allowing for different approaches but this is from outer space.

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Lotta ink for a 1S-4S hand.

 

 

After 1-(2) I believe that I, as North, would bid only 3. My thin king would be that with ten trump they are not apt to double even if they should and we might well have nine tricks. Not knowing about South's extra strength I would worry that 4 would be doubled and, given the colors, not work out well. Shifting seats, it is not at all clear to me that after

1-(2)-3-(Pass) I would bid the game. It does make, some bid it, and if the defense begins with ace of hearts and another heart (as it might if North is declarer, if West has bid hearts, and East is on lead with two small hearts) then eleven tricks are possible.

 

So maybe we should reach 4. I just don't think that I would. The question of who, if anyone, should reasonably be expected to get us to game is of interest, at least to me.

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Agree Ken. This is the kind of hand where I restrain myself at unfavorable.

 

On another note, anybody for a double by west over a 1 opening? The heart suit is nothing to write home about.

 

I believe that I would double rather than bid 2. My thought would be to play at the 3 level or, more likely, drive them to the 3 level, and X seems to me to be the best approach. But either way could work.

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