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Correct Rebid?


  

44 members have voted

  1. 1. South should:

    • Pass
      6
    • 2S
      29
    • 2N
      3
    • 3C
      4
    • 3H
      2
    • 3S
      0
    • 3N
      0
    • Other
      0


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If pard were a passed hand, this would be an easy pass/2. As it stands, you can try

 

1. 3 + 3. The cue in this situation shows a decent opener or better. Followed by 3 you finish the description, albeit at a high level.

2. 2NT. This hides the 6th spade but is spot on values (12-14).

3. 2. This is an underbid, but can work well.

 

I think I go for 2.

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If pard were a passed hand, this would be an easy pass/2. As it stands, you can try

 

1. 3 + 3. The cue in this situation shows a decent opener or better. Followed by 3 you finish the description, albeit at a high level.

2. 2NT. This hides the 6th spade but is spot on values (12-14).

3. 2. This is an underbid, but can work well.

 

I think I go for 2.

 

I think a free NT rebid by an overcaller shows a better hand than 12-14, more like 14-16 - maybe 1NT could show a little less.

 

I admit I haven't ever seen much written about this auction though. So you could be right about what is standard.

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Need to know a bit more about our style. If for example my overcall shows ostensibly 7-16 and 2 covers the whole semipositive range, it would be something like 9-16. But probably that range is too wide to be playable.

 

Anyway, I would like to show a bit of extra values while at the same time avoid commiting to a particular strain. 2NT feels wrong with the 6th spade and if we belong in 3NT, probably partner needs to declare. I'll go for 3 but it is probably an overbid. This problem may be a good case for playing intermediate jump overcalls.

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Deleted.

 

(By the way, the "Delete My Vote" button is one of the greatest advances since the cell phone)

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2S here as well. We don't have to bid, so this should convey something in the light of 2H being NF.

Would you pass with a 5044 hand of less strength than this then? I have never played 2 as non-forcing here so perhaps this works out ok - feels strange to me coming from the forcing side though.

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I'm assuming 2 shows roughly 10-15.

 

I suspect you are alone in playing 2 as non-forcing but it is extremely unplayable with an upper end >11 and should at least be constructive (8?). If that's not the case, ditch the method.

 

That makes this a choice between pass and 2 which I would bid hoping to catch 2-card support (and maybe game) or play a 6-1 fit instead of 5-2 losing out to playing a 6-1 fit instead of a 6-2 but if partner passes me out here their "constructive" 2 bid with a stiff spade is questionable at best.

 

You might get better answers if you spell out the range/type of hand that bids a non-forcing 2. It's very much a minority treatment.

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Would you pass with a 5044 hand of less strength than this then? I have never played 2 as non-forcing here so perhaps this works out ok - feels strange to me coming from the forcing side though.

 

Depends. If i'd make such an overcall I'd probably have a rebid prepared for this situation. But yeah with a dead minimum i'd pass and maybe pull later if they start doubling. I don't play 2H NF so I'm making this up on the spot lol.

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2 shows a hand too good to WJO in my book, which seems fine, although raising is tempting too.

 

Yup 3H crossed my mind, but I have no clue what a 2H might look like at it's weakest and strongest ranges. Since I don't know that, 2S seems more honest, it should be constructive and keeps the bidding open.

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Why should 2 show a hand "too good for WJO"? Can't you have something like

 

JTxxxx

xx

AKJx

x

That hand is an obvious pass. Thinking of bidding 2 means that you want to show your hand rather than to listen to what partner is saying.

 

Partner bids a non forcing 2. That means that he doesn't like spades (he could have chosen a very non forcing pass) but he is offering a decent heart suit since he thinks that will play better. So, if you refuse his offer, you need to have a reason. JTxxxx is not a reason.

 

Just picture partner with a typical:

x

KJTxxx

xx

Kxxx

 

or even

 

x

KQJxx

xxx

Kxxx

 

(which is a hand that should pass 1)

 

It is clear that a heart contract will play better than a spade contract.

 

Rik

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Nf doesn't mean dead. It means semipositive. You bid 2h with a hand too strong to pass yet too weak to force beyond 2h.

If you play wide ranging overcalls and won't consider transfer advances this is the only playable method. If partner routinely overcall on 8-counts what am I supposed to do with a misfitting 11-count if 2h is forcing?

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