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Who bids first?

 

I think 6NT needs the club split, while 6 is pretty good especially played by N. It's harder by S on a spade lead, as you then need to guess whether to play for K onside or the club break.

 

My auction may well be

1-2

2-3

3NT - end

 

At least that one's a guaranteed plus score...

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I think 3NT would be likely for me, as boring (and probably wrong) as that is:

 

1 = 15+ nat/bal or 18+ any

... - 1 = 4+ spades, GF (if bal or 3-suited then 4+ hearts)

1 = relay, usually 18+

... - 2 = 4 spades, 5+ clubs

2 = relay

... - 3 = 4216

3 = relay

... - 3 = min

3NT

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Looks to me as if N has a clear 1 opener: opening 2 is just asking for trouble on what is really a 3-suiter with marginal values and diamonds as the longest suit.

 

In 2/1 S has no option but to bid 1, even if 2 is not a gf if followed by 3. Missing a 4-4 spade fit just doesn't seem right.

 

N has an easy reverse, with, now, significant extras in light of the 1 response.

 

S can bid 3, natural and game forcing.

 

N now bids 3 to describe 12 of his cards...he is 3=4=5=1 or 3=4=6=0.

 

S hates this so he tries to slow it down via 3N. Partner's marked club shortness makes slam remote.

 

N could, I suppose, find a pass if he trusts partner to have no slam interest and good club stoppers, but I can't see myself doing that. I'd bid 4N, natural. Now it's anyone's guess, but my view (which may be influenced by knowing the hand) is that S should pass. He has the worst possible diamond holding, close to the worst possible spade holding, and he knows that the clubs probably won't run...heck, even if N has the stiff J, he likely has to guess whether to play for the drop of the 10 or hope that the spade J is an entry. I'd go really low as S and pass 4N.

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In 2/1 S has no option but to bid 1, even if 2 is not a gf if followed by 3. Missing a 4-4 spade fit just doesn't seem right.

Bidding spades before clubs on this hand seems like it could lead to a lot of problems. I would rather treat this as a game force and/or give up on a 4-4 spade fit. But it's possible to have methods after 1-2 where you can investigate a spade fit and still play 3 if partner is minimum.

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I'd like to be in 6 by North, but I'll settle for 6 by South.

 

I'd normally play 3 by responder on the second round as FSF, so my responder would have to rebid 3NT. How about the agricultural:

1-1

2-3NT

4NT-6

 

Obviously we should play 5NT as a transfer to clubs, but unfortunately I've never discussed that with anyone.

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I'd like to be in 6 by North, but I'll settle for 6 by South.

 

I'd normally play 3 by responder on the second round as FSF, so my responder would have to rebid 3NT. How about the agricultural:

1-1

2-3NT

4NT-6

 

Obviously we should play 5NT as a transfer to clubs, but unfortunately I've never discussed that with anyone.

I dont see the downside to 3c after 2h whats the worst that can happen? Here partner

patterns out with 3s and when you bid 3n now you are showing extra values unlike

the 3n which you bid earlier which may easily be with a fair 8 count. Your proposed

4n seems like a big stretch considering just how light p may be for their 3n bid. What

would they need to consider 6 (a balanced 11 count maybe)?

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Looks to me as if N has a clear 1 opener: opening 2 is just asking for trouble on what is really a 3-suiter with marginal values and diamonds as the longest suit.

 

In 2/1 S has no option but to bid 1, even if 2 is not a gf if followed by 3. Missing a 4-4 spade fit just doesn't seem right.

 

N has an easy reverse, with, now, significant extras in light of the 1 response.

 

S can bid 3, natural and game forcing.

 

N now bids 3 to describe 12 of his cards...he is 3=4=5=1 or 3=4=6=0.

 

S hates this so he tries to slow it down via 3N. Partner's marked club shortness makes slam remote.

 

N could, I suppose, find a pass if he trusts partner to have no slam interest and good club stoppers, but I can't see myself doing that. I'd bid 4N, natural. Now it's anyone's guess, but my view (which may be influenced by knowing the hand) is that S should pass. He has the worst possible diamond holding, close to the worst possible spade holding, and he knows that the clubs probably won't run...heck, even if N has the stiff J, he likely has to guess whether to play for the drop of the 10 or hope that the spade J is an entry. I'd go really low as S and pass 4N.

 

Mark Lair once admonished me to "never get excited about Jxxx support of a second suit". He didn't mention third suits. B-)

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+1. I think this is more common and useful than 4th suit. It only stymies us when we are specifically, 4324 with zero in clubs which seems super-unlikely.

I agree that this is a sequence where we might be able to manage without FSF, but it's still useful to be able to say that you have no clear direction. Playing FSF, a 3 bid shows actual suitability for diamonds, and a 2 bid followed by a game-forcing action shows a decent spade suit.

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