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Pass or 3C


HeartA

  

41 members have voted

  1. 1. What would you bid?



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3 is a big favorite to fail and 4 has such limited expectations of making that you can't justify making any game try. If partner has 3 hearts, it wasn't good enough for a direct raise, otherwise, you're looking at a 5-2 heart fit with a minimum hand that needs a perfect fit and probably some very good luck to make game.
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First, I will say that I would pass 2, and that this is absolutely clear.

 

But this is not as trivial a problem as many are making it out to be.

 

Playing a forcing NT, opener will rebid 2 on a 3-card holding (and even on a 2-card holding if he is 4522 or if his system, like mine, requires 4 diamonds for a 2 rebid, but I digress).

 

So, it may very well be that clubs is a superior contract, as responder will take a "preference" to 2 holding more clubs than hearts if the disparity is only one card.

 

However, I know of no one who plays that a 3 rebid here with less than invitational values, so opener cannot afford to take another call.

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The preference could be fake. partner didn't have 4-card , didn't bid 2, it is very likely he has at least 3.

 

It certainly could be a fake preference, but

 

1) There's no guarantee that is fake

2) 3 is a level higher so you need to take an additional trick just to break even.

3) There's no guarantee that clubs will play at a trick better than hearts

4) There's no way to play 3 since every bid over 2 shows at least an invitational hand in standard methods.

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I voted pass, wtp. But that is in the context of standard methods, where I expect 3C to show extras.

 

But HeartA argument is thought-provoking. Cast aside for a moment what is standard and re-think about what is optimal.

 

As he says, with 3-2-6-2 shape responder would probably rebid 2D over 2C.

In some partnerships it is possible for responder to have 3 Hearts on this auction, distinguishing between a good (immediate) 2H raise from a delayed. But I think it heavy favourite that he only has 2 of them.

Also, a 2N followup by opener over 2H is somewhat redundant as a balanced hand (why did he not raise 1N?) so COULD be used to show a proper game try. Likewise a 2S followup over 2H is available.

There does seem to be room for 3C here to be a simple correction.

 

And it certainly could work. Responder could have 2 Hearts and 4 Clubs. And even with just 2-3 in Hearts and Clubs, superficially it seems to gain nothing to go a level higher to play in a one-card better fit. But if you get tapped in Hearts in a 7 card fit and lose control it could certainly cost more than one trick.

 

The previous poster talks about guarantees. There are seldom guarantees in this game. That is not a reason to buck the numbers.

 

Can't say that I have totally made up my mind on this. One reason to pass is that you have yet to be doubled.And it seems to be a bit of brainache to cater for this special situation. What if opener's second suit had been Diamonds?

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Dear, I think you have to say 'Pass'. Trying to possibly 'improve' the contract into clubs is just not possible with this bidding sequence. It is also not at all clear that 3 would do so, IF it were that kind of bid. It is not. You must learn when to just stop bidding because the more you try, the higher you get. This is one of those cases.
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  • 4 months later...

The preference could be fake. partner didn't have 4-card , didn't bid 2, it is very likely he has at least 3.

 

I like this a lot. Did 1NT deny three hearts in your methods? Could 2C have been short? If so, partner is 3253/3244/2254 and 3C rates to be much the better spot. Invitational 5H5C hands could start with an ART 2S bid.

 

If partner could have a weak three-card raise then obviously pass is clear. Also, at risk of stating the obvious, this logic only applies for auctions starting 1H-P-1N.

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I would pass unless I picked up something during the auction that the guy in the passout seat was thinking of doing something, I suspect we can't beat 3 quite a bit of the time, and the only purpose of bidding would be to not give him an easy X/2. 3 for me is a better hand although I might like it not to be on this hand.
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I voted pass uneasily as I know that decent opps are likely to get in to the auction with probably double then 2. This looks almost certain to make (at least an 8 card fit) and as cyber says 3 may make a lot of the time. If I could bid 3 for it to be passed I would but cannot because it is forcing in my book. So when opps do get to 2 I have to decide whether or not to bid 3. I think I would do this, considering myself to be very unlucky if we get doubled for penalty going off.
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As a novice, I struggle a bit to fully grasp some of the expert advice given here. I am still using mechanistic guidelines to get me through. With an agreed 8 card suit, I count 6 losers in my hand, and assume 9 losers in partner's hand, making 15 in all, so in the absence of anything else to guide me the highest I'd go to would be 3 hearts, but only if I had to after a 2 spade bid from my opponents. It's a primitive rationale. I can see that it lets the opposition into the bidding and they might bid and make 3 Spades. Is it a reasonable approach for a novice?
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As a novice, I struggle a bit to fully grasp some of the expert advice given here. I am still using mechanistic guidelines to get me through. With an agreed 8 card suit, I count 6 losers in my hand, and assume 9 losers in partner's hand, making 15 in all, so in the absence of anything else to guide me the highest I'd go to would be 3 hearts, but only if I had to after a 2 spade bid from my opponents. It's a primitive rationale. I can see that it lets the opposition into the bidding and they might bid and make 3 Spades. Is it a reasonable approach for a novice?

Quite reasonable. If they pushed you, you might try 3C rather than 3H.

It is not uncommon for a minimum 1-level response to have an LTC of 10.

S:Qxx

H:xx

D:Kxxxx

CJxx

Note that if Hearts are the envisaged trump suit, you should count 3 losers, not 2, in the Heart suit.

 

We generally shy away from applying losing trick count until a trump fit is confirmed, and preference back to 2H in this sequence suggests otherwise.

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As a novice, I struggle a bit to fully grasp some of the expert advice given here. I am still using mechanistic guidelines to get me through. With an agreed 8 card suit, I count 6 losers in my hand, and assume 9 losers in partner's hand, making 15 in all

I would recommend against the LTC, not because it is not reasonable but rather because it is actually simpler to convert it to a normal point count and then you can additionally fine tune the numbers more easily. The (modern) LTC is functionally identical to a system where Ace = 3; King = 2; Queen = 1 and Void = 6; Singleton = 3; Doubleton = 1, which in turn is functionally identical to Ace = 4.5; King = 3; Queen = 1.5; Void = 9; Singleton = 4.5; Doubleton = 1.5.

 

Notice the similarity of this 4.5 - 3 - 1.5 scale to the Milton Work 4 - 3 - 2. Notice also that the values for shortages (9 - 4.5 - 1.5) are considerably higher than the typical 5 - 3 - 1 that is recommended. This highlights an issue with the LTC where it tends to overvalue shortages in normal (8 card) fits.

 

So putting this all together, a strategy for building up a "mechanistic" approach to evaluation would be to start with the regular 4 - 3 - 2 - 1 Milton Work count but upgrade aces a little bit and downgrade queens and jacks. Well, that is unsupported queens and jacks. You see it turns out that lesser honours tend to be more valuable in combination with aces and kings. With a fit we can then add shortage points. My suggestion would be to stick with 5 - 3 - 1 rather than going up to LTC levels unless you have a super (10 card) fit. Finally, you need to pay attantion to the auction generally. If partner opens 1 and we have 2 card support that is much more positive than having a void. Similarly honours in partner's suits are more valuable than normal; and honours in partner's shortages much less valuable.

 

In other words, even such a "mechanistic" approach requires you to constantly adjust your hand evaluation beyond just a simple number, whether that be hcp, Losers, Honour Tricks or bananas. After a while these adjustments will come naturally and you will probably be able to drop any conscious counting effort. That will also enable you to think in terms of fractions (or as I say pluses and minuses) rather than outright points. I would also recommed that you look out for posts by mikeh and perhaps even google old posts of his. He tends to be able to describe this evaluation process very well and in some detail. He absolutely does not use any point-based adjustment method whatsoever though, so some of it may be a little too advanced at forst. Nonetheless you can perhaps see how to incorporate ever more accurate adjustments to your model as well as getting exposure to the more refined world of expert judgement. Nearly all of us here at BBF benefit from that!

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The (modern) LTC is functionally identical to a system where Ace = 3; King = 2; Queen = 1 and Void = 6; Singleton = 3; Doubleton = 1, which in turn is functionally identical to Ace = 4.5; King = 3; Queen = 1.5; Void = 9; Singleton = 4.5; Doubleton = 1.5.

 

Many thanks for that.

Not sure I understand why you have scaled up the ratios. I have constructed a hand S Axx H QJxx D Qx C Qxx. With LTC I get 7 Losing Tricks. Using your scaled up ratios I get 12 (4.5 + 1.5 + 3 + 1.5 + 1.5). I am guessing that 18-7 = 11 which is roughly equivalent to your 12. Or am I well wide of the mark?

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The reason for scaling up is to make the numbers equivalent to the 4 - 3 - 2 - 1 Milton Work scale. That means that you can use a single system with adjustments rather than 2 completely different methods. This helps to emphasise the core idea that evaluation changes constantly, not only when a fit is found.

 

Your example hand is around 9 losers (1.5 + 2.5 + 2.5 + 2.5); I say around as I do not have the book for the full range of adjustments. Even in the original LTC (which is equivalent to all of the A, K and Q counting 3 points) this would be 8 losers (2 in each suit). In my equivalence formula you do not count the queen in Qx, in the same way as this is not counted in LTC. So 4.5 + 1.5 + 1.5 + 1.5 = 9. This answer is always (12 - L) * 3, where L is the Loser count. You can see this from using a king as the basic counting block - 1 in MLTC, 3 in MWC.

 

This also brings us on to another major area of adjustment that I did not bring up in the previous mail. I suggest subtracting a full point for short honours, so something along the lines of A = 3.5, K = 2, Q = 0.5, J = 0, QJ = 1.5, Qx = 0.5 (+1 for shortage), Jx = 0. As you can pehaps see, this evaluation process starts to become somewhat involved quite quickly, which is probably why beginners are shied away from it and towards the massive simplification of Milton Work. I am not convinced that is such a good idea - it is a good idea to have some idea about the limitations of the system and how to overcome them without turning to an alternative massive simplification such as the MLTC.

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  • 2 weeks later...

As a novice, I struggle a bit to fully grasp some of the expert advice given here. I am still using mechanistic guidelines to get me through. With an agreed 8 card suit, I count 6 losers in my hand, and assume 9 losers in partner's hand, making 15 in all, so in the absence of anything else to guide me the highest I'd go to would be 3 hearts, but only if I had to after a 2 spade bid from my opponents. It's a primitive rationale. I can see that it lets the opposition into the bidding and they might bid and make 3 Spades. Is it a reasonable approach for a novice?

The preference back to 2 does not promise any more than 2 . With 3 or more s, it's normal for responder to raise directly, or start a temporizing sequence with a raise on the second round (invitational or better). Here responder has shown a limited hand (6-9), so is very unlikely to hold 3 s.

 

As someone suggested, if they balance in at 2 in the pass out seat, opener might compete at 3 . That tells opener's whole story (5-5) and gives responder the chance to take a preference. I'd expect more often than not responder would pass 3 . The reason why I'd expect 3 to played more often is that responder holding 3 s and 2 s will normally preference back to 2 as in this auction. Opener promised no more than 4 with the 2 bid, so it would be normal for responder to prefer to play in the known 5-2 fit rather than a possible 4-3 fit.

 

Responder might pass 2 if holding a really ratty response and 4 .

 

At IMPs, vulnerable, I'd seriously consider passing out 2 if the opponents competed to it. The absolute minimum nature of the opening bid and very mediocre, at best, suit make competing further a bit risky.

 

BTW, I'm in the pass over 2 camp.

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