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10 members have voted

  1. 1. Who's to blame?

    • No blame. Pre-empts work. Both N/S acted reasonably.
    • Equal blame.
      0
    • Both to blame, but more to N.
      0
    • Both to blame, but more to S.
      0
    • N completely to blame.
    • S completely to blame.


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Please assess the blame, or whether blame exists.

 

[hv=pc=n&s=s6ha5dak9876cak62&n=sq73hkjt963d2cqj4&d=w&v=n&b=12&a=2sp3sdp4hp5dppp]266|200[/hv]

 

Playing relatively standard 2/1. Pairs.

 

6 is a great contract. 5 is a nightmare when diamonds split 5-1.

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Please assess the blame, or whether blame exists.

 

[hv=pc=n&s=s6ha5dak9876cak62&n=sq73hkjt963d2cqj4&d=w&v=n&b=12&a=2sp3sdp4hp5dppp]266|200[/hv]

 

Playing relatively standard 2/1. Pairs.

 

6 is a great contract. 5 is a nightmare when diamonds split 5-1.

Saying that 6 is a great contract is an overbid. If the opps don't start with two top spades, you need to find the Q and find hearts 3-2 (or find the Q singleton). If the opps do start with two top spades, you need to find the Q coming down singleton or doubleton.

 

I would blame South. His hand is not worth a double followed by a 5 call. He should just bid 4 over 3 and then pass when North bids 4.

 

South 100%.

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5 is almost a better contract than 6 imo, all you need is 3-3 diamonds.

North's first call- P = 10, 3 = 4

South's first call- 4 = 10, 5 = 8, X = 5, 4NT = 3

North's second call- 4 = 10, 5 = 1

South's second call- P = 10, 5 = 7, 4NT = 4

North's third call, P = 10, 5 = 2

 

I blame south.

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I am ok with South's bidding although it is a bit aggresive.

 

North should correct to 5 or 6. South must have some heart tolerance, otherwise he would have bid 5 directly.

Not necessarily, can he not have the same hand with the majors reversed ?

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I am ok with South's bidding although it is a bit aggresive.

 

North should correct to 5 or 6. South must have some heart tolerance, otherwise he would have bid 5 directly.

Agreed, except that North is not worth 6.

South bidding is blameless and he is strong enough with 3.5 losers, good distribution and a control rich hand to double first in my book.

If North holds something like xxx xxx xx QJxxx an immediate 4 risks playing there when 6 is excellent.

 

100% to North

 

Rainer Herrmann

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Partner always has 6 clubs and no diamonds when I do that and we go off in 5 with 6 rigid.

True, I am not happy having to suppress the clubs, but if you double partner is more likely to insist on hearts rather than having clubs.

You could bid 4NT instead of 5 or DBL, but this has other drawbacks.

Preempts work (at least in this case).

 

Rainer Herrmann

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I would NEVER double with a stiff heart.

 

I don't mind 4 or double (pre-empts work) but after double I think you have to suck it up and pass 4 or you are just switching horses from your first choice.

 

Opposite KQJT and some minor suit filler it's a dream and opposite the right minor suit fillers you might arrange to lose a spade and a couple of hearts to their long trump hand when they have run out of spades.

 

Yes, I could easily miss a minor suit slam but thems the breaks.

 

ps. I voted south 100% to blame but that's not right as North should clearly bid 5 which South may even be raising with a bit better hand.

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True, I am not happy having to suppress the clubs, but if you double partner is more likely to insist on hearts rather than having clubs.

You could bid 4NT instead of 5 or DBL, but this has other drawbacks.

Preempts work (at least in this case).

 

Rainer Herrmann

Is it too much fantasy to say:

 

If I was big one suited with a minor I'd have bid 4/5m

If I was 5-5 in the minors I'd have bid 4N

 

So X then 5 is 6/4 or similar

and X then 4N is 6/4

 

X then 4 asks aces in hearts ?

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Is it too much fantasy to say:

 

If I was big one suited with a minor I'd have bid 4/5m

If I was 5-5 in the minors I'd have bid 4N

 

So X then 5 is 6/4 or similar

and X then 4N is 6/4

 

X then 4 asks aces in hearts ?

 

My thoughts exactly. 4N should really show exactly this hand imo.

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interesting one, I think North to blame, surely he's too strong to pass it out??

 

you're misunderstanding the nature of double followed by a new suit over a pre-empt - it doesn't show a hand too strong to overcall, as it would at the 1-level. Rather it shows the values to bid at the end-level, i.e. 5D but with a more flexible shape than a direct 5D call would suggest. This is basically what south has.

 

Anyway, north with 2 more hearts than he'll often have should go back to hearts.

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you're misunderstanding the nature of double followed by a new suit over a pre-empt - it doesn't show a hand too strong to overcall, as it would at the 1-level. Rather it shows the values to bid at the end-level, i.e. 5D but with a more flexible shape than a direct 5D call would suggest. This is basically what south has.

 

Anyway, north with 2 more hearts than he'll often have should go back to hearts.

 

 

thanks :)

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