Jump to content

High level competitive decision


shyams

  

32 members have voted

  1. 1. What next?



Recommended Posts

I'm with helene_t on this one. One of the reasons you bid on is the stiff . You know there's only 1 loser, but partner may well be looking at xx and be uncertain what to do if the auction is passed back to him/her.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

5h clear, p has four hts and even if he has two aces six could be hard.

 

It is not clear that partner has 4 hearts. What would you bid with either

 

xx, Axx, Qxx, Axxxx

 

or

 

xxx, Jxx, Qxx, AQxxx

 

?

 

I surely am not passing for I would never be able to catch up if partner subsequently reopens with a double.

 

The negative double suggests a desire to bid and no good natural bid. That usually means 4 hearts after a 1S overcall, but it could mean bit beyond the minimum in terms of honor values.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

My vote was for 5.

 

I have a 4 loser hand and partner passed as dealer so slam is unlikely to be as good as on a finesse and I have no way of finding out.

 

I rejected both 4NT (presumably some kind of takeout bid) and 5 because 7-4 hands frequently do no play well in 4-4 fits.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I voted 5, but I like 4NT.

IMO 5 rates to be a better contract even if partner does have four hearts because partner is very likely to hold at least three diamonds.

Going for the higher scoring major game is not as relevant after this auction, is it? and undertricks are scored the same way in both major and minors :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

4NT should be 2 places to play in this auction. It cant be to play as I would x for penalty.

I feel we need X for penalty. (Responsive x thru 3)Bidding a suit would show I want to compete/sac.

5should work assuming partner has 3 in the unbid suits for x, but I would assume partner may be 2425 or 2434 at this point and correct their 5to and settle for 5correction from there.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I believe that partner has four hearts. I have one very rare occasions dbld with something like xx-AJx-Kxx-Jxxxx but a passed hand can bid 2 with that, and even as an unpassed hand it would be a bit dubious. If 1 guarantees four cards, 2 is better, and otherwise there is always the green card.

 

But I also think that a 7-2 fit in diamonds is likely to play better after such an autions where badly splitting trumps are likely.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I bid 4NT, two places to play. Pull 5C to 5D, showing long diamonds and 4 hearts. I agree with helene_t that 5D is safer than 5H, provided partner has 2-3 diamonds. If hearts break 4-1, we could get forced in both hands. I'd be happier if partner has 5 hearts, which is quite conceivable, e.g. 2-5-1-5.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

OK, I buy that 4NT would be a great bid. TBH, it didn't even occur to me at the table; and I thank the forum for this useful suggestion.

 

If (as an addendum) I stated that it was Matchpoints, would it make any difference to your chosen action?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It is not clear that partner has 4 hearts. What would you bid with either

 

xx, Axx, Qxx, Axxxx

 

or

 

xxx, Jxx, Qxx, AQxxx

 

?

 

I surely am not passing for I would never be able to catch up if partner subsequently reopens with a double.

 

The negative double suggests a desire to bid and no good natural bid. That usually means 4 hearts after a 1S overcall, but it could mean bit beyond the minimum in terms of honor values.

Muddled thinking I dare say, though you are not alone.

If a minor suit opener fetches a spade overcall it is very common that advancer will raise or jump raise overcaller when he has support.

It escapes me how you ever want to land on your feet when a negative double can show almost any number of hearts over a spade overcall.

I have found it disaster prone if a negative double (unless very strong) does not guarantee at least 4 cards in the remaining unbid major (unless you have a specific agreements that it denies 4 cards).

Opener simply has to rely on this when considering a contract in the unbid major after a likely raise or jump raise by advancer.

(I still prefer 4NT on the actual hand)

 

If you can not stand a Pass, it must be much better with the hands you give to bid 2, forcing or not, making it unlikely that you hold 4 cards in the unbid major.

But let's change to a worse scenario: With the hands you gave assume the minors were reversed and opener had opened 1 instead. Now a 2 response over 1 would be more problematic.

The alternative is in deed to pass. You say you can not catch up then?

A reopening double at a low level does commonly not promise any extra beyond an opening.

So tell us with what strength responder can afford to raise the level voluntarily by jumping in a new suit or cue-bid after Pass if the reopening double does not promise more than a minimum opening?

Responder simply must have a hand of invitational or near invitational strength not suited for immediate action.

Accordingly I can not see why you can not catch up.

 

Rainer Herrmann

Link to comment
Share on other sites

OK, I buy that 4NT would be a great bid. TBH, it didn't even occur to me at the table; and I thank the forum for this useful suggestion.

 

If (as an addendum) I stated that it was Matchpoints, would it make any difference to your chosen action?

No, at this high level, you just try to get to a good spot versus the perfect spot. Unless the doubler can do so, it's pretty hard to discern whether 5 is better than 5 because it also makes and scores more. Tell your story and let partner decide, then accept the result.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...