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How would you bid this?


andrei

  

41 members have voted

  1. 1. your bid?

    • 6S
      0
    • 4C (gerber)
      8
    • 4H (transfer) followed by 4N (RKC)
      15
    • 4N (quantitative)
      1
    • 2H (transfer) followed by 4N (quantitative)
      3
    • other
      14


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My God, a hand where I think Gerber is the right bid if we are playing it!

If you do use Gerber and partner shows two Aces ,how do you propose to proceed further? Which denomination are you going to decide as your final contract?

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I am conflicted between xfer then RKC and blasting 6NT. If after RKC, pad shows 2, then 6NT, if not, 5S.

The blast is gambling that even if off 2 aces, they are not in one hand and there is still a good chance in play.

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I am thinking. .. The torture auction is a transfer, followed by a manufactured 3C, and then Opener bidding 3H to show 5 hearts. That's good news that you don't want to hear.
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There are many 15-16 point hands on which the opps can get 2 heart tricks. Therefore, the only intelligent way to bid this hand is to transfer, and bid 3h as a Goldman Slam try.

If partner does not at some point cue bid the A-h, slam is marginal (although it will have the advantage of playing from partner's side, protecting the h-k, if he has it). This is also the only way to find if 7 spades has any play.

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There are many 15-16 point hands on which the opps can get 2 heart tricks. Therefore, the only intelligent way to bid this hand is to transfer, and bid 3h as a Goldman Slam try.

If partner does not at some point cue bid the A-h, slam is marginal (although it will have the advantage of playing from partner's side, protecting the h-k, if he has it). This is also the only way to find if 7 spades has any play.

Always nice when you can announce to partner, when bidding 3, that it is a 'Goldman slam try'. Of course, there is a high likelihood that all that will produce is a blank look of incomprehension.

 

So assume you don't have a gadget that matches this hand or that you are not permitted to play adjective bridge...what do you do?

 

I think it pretty obvious that the OP didn't have a specialized gadget, else the problem would not have been a problem.

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Always nice when you can announce to partner, when bidding 3, that it is a 'Goldman slam try'. Of course, there is a high likelihood that all that will produce is a blank look of incomprehension.

 

So assume you don't have a gadget that matches this hand or that you are not permitted to play adjective bridge...what do you do?

 

I think it pretty obvious that the OP didn't have a specialized gadget, else the problem would not have been a problem.

LOL! I envy your first use of the term adjective bridge!

 

You and I definitely agree as to the parameters of the problem as posted and as to 3C as a practical solution. I am really curious as to how you cope with the unexpectedly interesting development of Opener introducing five hearts (if you also interpret 3H as natural with 5).

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LOL! I envy your first use of the term adjective bridge!

 

You and I definitely agree as to the parameters of the problem as posted and as to 3C as a practical solution. I am really curious as to how you cope with the unexpectedly interesting development of Opener introducing five hearts (if you also interpret 3H as natural with 5).

I wouldn't play 3 as showing 5.

 

In addition, the phrase adjective bridge has been around for decades. Indeed, in lighter moments (which, if memory serves, were probably alcohol fuelled...given that it was when I lived in residence at university) I have actually played a few hands of it, but it becomes boring very quickly. I suspect the phrase has been coined many times and I am not claiming any credit for it

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I wouldn't play 3 as showing 5.

That's how I handle Responder having 5-3 or 3-5 in the majors. He transfers to the 5 card major and then bids a 4 card minor or clubs if no 4 card minor. If Opener has 2-5 then the fit is found. There are obvious caveats to avoid bypassing 3NT.

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On the combined points,a slam is possible but it is ludicrous to bid a slam

until Aces have been checked on. This is a perfect hand for Gerber yet it only scored

17% of the vote. :blink: 4 as a transfer might work but there would have to be a prior agreement

about this. I think the best bid is 3 which is game forcing. If partner supports then Blackwood

can follow. However,if the response is 3NT,its best to settle for that. Its possible a slam could be missed but

equally there is also the chance of two top losers. Sometimes you fail to land the fish,but at least you avoid

falling in the river (!) :)

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While I think 6NT is slightly better than 6, if WE can play 6 I bet it's a better contract than 6NT by partner, to protect those minor suit holdings. While I don't anymore use 3 as GF+, setting trump and demanding cuebids (the first one by opener having to promise an Ace), the 2 times it had come up for me in the past it gave me top boards for making slam by right-siding it.
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Unfortunately 4 is a transfer to .

 

Andrei, the OP, mentions 4C is Gerber in his poll. So, perhaps you weren't his partner here.

 

Gerber is a good news/bad news thing here.

 

If LHO has a club holding worthy of a Double:

 

---Good news, you can identify it and with the simple tool for Opener of passing the Double unless he has a prime (which certainly every experienced pair has thought of by now) you are saved and just stop in 4S.

 

---Bad news, you use the tool above but the other table just blasted and didn't provide the leakage.

 

BTW, did the 80% sims assume the right guess of opening lead when we are off a cashable AK?

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[way, way offtopic]I ran a crazy bridge game (which I used to do at University) this weekend at one of our players' bar. One of the hands was "Adjective Bridge" (which I gave some leeway for things like "SATexas"). IIRC, it went:

 

"2 crappy " ("ALERT" [we're playing EHAA as a base])

"One happy pass"

"one reluctant pass"

"one balancing double"

"relieved pass"

"2 forced "

"confident X"

...-800. Partner had a minimum, not a crappy, opener (I expected Jxxxxx and a 3-count, she thought she had to stay in system)

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On the combined points,a slam is possible but it is ludicrous to bid a slam

until Aces have been checked on.

 

It's not "ludicrous" to bid a slam without checking on aces. In fact I suspect that the odds favour responding 6NT rather than asking for aces first. It's quite easy to construct hands where you will make it, even having to knock out one of the missing aces. Suppose partner has something like xx KQx QJ10xx AKx . If they lead a spade or a diamond and the aces are split you've got a good chance of making.

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On the combined points,a slam is possible but it is ludicrous to bid a slam

until Aces have been checked on. This is a perfect hand for Gerber yet it only scored

17% of the vote. :blink:

 

Bidding slam via Gerber virtually gives them the killer lead on a plate (even more so once you've cued a few times), whereas bidding 6N direct more or less guarantees they won't find it if their AK are split, and might well miss it if leader has neither.

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Because it gets you to way more making thin 3NT contracts than bad slams obv.

That was my point.

I doubt that there are many "good" 14, which will get you to a thin 3NT making, say opposite a balanced ten count, but will not offer you good play for 6NT here.

There might be a few, but certainly not many.

There is little justification in upgrading quacky 14 counts.

 

If you upgrade

 

xxx Kx AQJTx Axx

 

go ahead

 

Rainer Herrmann

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It is a good rule of thumb to try to always use clubs as the fake bid, if at all possible. Sometimes it isn't, as in when partner bids or shows clubs, because you never fake primary support (you can fake preferences in some cases, but never primary support)

 

The reason is to allow opener to know that your diamond bids, when clubs could be fake, are real. In addition, when you always use clubs for the fake bid, it becomes ok for partner to cater to this as a matter of bridge logic without causing UI issues. Despite what Ken implied earlier about people coming around to his way of thinking, the notion that one can fake a club bid has been around since well before even I started playing, and that was more than 40 years ago. Faking a bid in order to get by this round has a very long, honourable ancestry to the point that no experienced player could claim to be surprised by it.

 

I never want p to assume my bids are fake so I limit my use of them to times where it is safe (like the example hand).

I would have much greater heartache with someone always using clubs as fake (surprise or no) since long standing

partnerships would undoubtedly cater their bidding to this relatively frequent use. I may misuse a convention when it is

convenient/safe for ex p opens 1s and I hold AKxxxxx void AKQ AQJ I have in the past bid 4c splinter with such hands knowing

p will sign off in 4s only if they have the club K and have the bidding proceed 4s 4n (checking for 7n and YES with a void)

5c (0 or 3) 7s x xx with a very upset lho thinking they had a cashing heart ace. UI is when p is using information they are

not entitled to not the fact that the bid itself is not what it is normally is used for. My fake 3d bid has a purpose to be

revealed later in the bidding whereas a fake 3c bid here would serve no actual useful purpose by my way of thinking and

I would like to see what follow ups are used after the fake 3c bid to allow one to land somewhere safely where my use of

the 3c bid would allow for the same effectiveness as the 3d bid would in fact in this sequence one can use a fake 3h bid

in the same way because we do not care about the heart fit per se.

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In particular, he definitely won't move if he is off the heart AK or if he holds only 1 Ace.

 

Not sure about this. He can have 17 and be off the AK. Sure its a bad 17 but he may feel obliged to bid.

 

I also think there is too much chance that 15 will be enough. My initial double dummy analysis, which I just use to get a ball park figure, showed that slam was 76% when partner was restricted to 15. I think this hand is more like I want to drive to slam unless I get some really bad news on the way. Hopefully I have methods to set trumps and cue and Blackwood (rkcb).

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It's not "ludicrous" to bid a slam without checking on aces. In fact I suspect that the odds favour responding 6NT rather than asking for aces first. It's quite easy to construct hands where you will make it, even having to knock out one of the missing aces. Suppose partner has something like xx KQx QJ10xx AKx . If they lead a spade or a diamond and the aces are split you've got a good chance of making.

 

Its also possible to construct hands where 6NT will NOT make. And bidding a slam without checking whether

the necessary controls are held is nothing short of folly. The partnership has a combined total of

31-33 pts leaving open the possibility of an AK combination in an opponents hand. Bidding a slam willy nilly

is suicidal.

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Its also possible to construct hands where 6NT will NOT make. And bidding a slam without checking whether

the necessary controls are held is nothing short of folly. The partnership has a combined total of

31-33 pts leaving open the possibility of an AK combination in an opponents hand. Bidding a slam willy nilly

is suicidal.

I think this is not so simple.

If correct and detailed bidding would lead you always to impregnable contracts you could be right.

This is not the case and checking on aces is not cost free.

When you hold between 31 and 33 HCP chances that you are missing 2 aces is not very high.

In fact my simulation shows that excluding the possibility of missing 2 aces increase your chances of success for 6NT only by a little bit more than 1% and your chances of success is already around 80%.

Double dummy it does not matter what you do in the bidding.

Single dummy you give a lot of lead information to opponents.

They can double or refuse to double your artificial bids and help opening leader what to lead.

For example give West KJ and East a red suit ace and a club lead may be the only chance to beat 6NT.

If you bid 1NT-6NT most will lead passiv. A spade lead is not unlikely.

 

Rainer Herrmann

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Its also possible to construct hands where 6NT will NOT make. And bidding a slam without checking whether

the necessary controls are held is nothing short of folly. The partnership has a combined total of

31-33 pts leaving open the possibility of an AK combination in an opponents hand. Bidding a slam willy nilly

is suicidal.

 

I'm more worried about being off two aces than being off an AK.

If we are off an AK we are virtually certain to have twelve tricks if the suit isn't led, which I would say is roughly 75% i.e. any time the opening leader doesn't have both.

How many people think it's right to make an aggressive lead into a strong NT opening on the auction 1N-6N?*

 

*Possibly there are more now...

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That was my point.

I doubt that there are many "good" 14, which will get you to a thin 3NT making, say opposite a balanced ten count, but will not offer you good play for 6NT here.

There might be a few, but certainly not many.

There is little justification in upgrading quacky 14 counts.

 

If you upgrade

 

xxx Kx AQJTx Axx

 

go ahead

 

Rainer Herrmann

 

And my point was that if you are upgrading the more frequent 5cd minor holdings such as AQ10xx or AK10xx then a suit contract may provide for more flexibility in the play.

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