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bidding a long suit


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There is no way to bid this scientifically. There just isn't a bid for 9 solid hearts and nothing else.

There are less bids available than possible hands and this is one left out.

Just do your best.

 

Well, if you have a South African Texas bid, say 3NT or 4 you might excite a partner holding an ace and a king.

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You could try 5 hearts. That'll surely be interpreted as a slam try. The drawback is that responder might (will!) assume opener has 11 sure tricks and bid one too many. As South, I'd probably assume North had 11 sure tricks because who pre-empts to 5 of a major?

 

I'm reading this on my phone and I only see 9 hearts for North and 12 cards for North. I'm assuming North actually has a 10th heart (the 2 or 3) to bring hand total to 13 cards.

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You could try 5 hearts. That'll surely be interpreted as a slam try. The drawback is that responder might (will!) assume opener has 11 sure tricks and bid one too many. As South, I'd probably assume North had 11 sure tricks because who pre-empts to 5 of a major?

 

I'm reading this on my phone and I only see 9 hearts for North and 12 cards for North. I'm assuming North actually has a 10th heart (the 2 or 3) to bring hand total to 13 cards.

 

Partner will NEVER bid 6, 5 says you have a long heart suit headed by QJ and the nuts outside and simply to bid up by the number of top hearts you have which will be none.

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You could try 5 hearts. That'll surely be interpreted as a slam try. The drawback is that responder might (will!) assume opener has 11 sure tricks and bid one too many. As South, I'd probably assume North had 11 sure tricks because who pre-empts to 5 of a major?

 

I'm reading this on my phone and I only see 9 hearts for North and 12 cards for North. I'm assuming North actually has a 10th heart (the 2 or 3) to bring hand total to 13 cards.

You're correct. N has 10 hearts. The 3 is not showing on the diagram.

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Shall open 2C and watch developments.IFopoonents dont intervene and partner bids two D then an unopposed auction will go,

2C- 2D. 3H asks for specific Ace/Aces.3S shows spade Ace ,.3NT asks specific Kings and 4 C shows the club King..

3H 3S

3NT 4C

6H

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Shall open 2C and watch developments.IFopoonents dont intervene

You are joking, right? How many times have you opened a 10 card suit at a low level and not seen anything but green from the opps?

 

If you do open 2, what is your plan if it goes something like 2 - (3) - P - (6), where partner's pass showed values? Are you going to bid 7 in front of partner? Or make a forcing pass? If you FP and partner doubles, are you feeling comfortable about sitting?

 

I think Vampyr has a good case for a 3NT or 4 opening if that is on our card. Failing that, there are good arguments for any number of hearts with the possible exceptions of 2, 3 and 7. Hands like this tend to be much more about tactical opportunity than any scientific method. Indeed there is a good argument for varying one's way of handling them, sometimes preempting high, sometimes using a slam-try opening and sometimes walking the dog. I could be wrong but I doubt anyone here could definitively say that a particular approach was absolutely the best, even Fred, Mike or Justin.

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With a long suit and little to no defense the first thing to think about is how high can one preempt. If we are bidding in a vacuum then going slow may make some sense but those pesky opps are always looking for a reason to enter the bidding. Look at the vulnerability. Ten tricks is a LOT of tricks that means the 5 level will almost always be safe (that means no more than down 1 no matter the vulnerability). This will not be popular but I suggest opening 4n (yes even with a void). Bridge is a game of %

with some science creeping in via slam bidding. This hand needs aces for slam and IMHO asking for them immediately is the best way to go. This is a straight blackwood since there is no agreed trump suit. If p shows 0 or 1 I suggest stopping in 5h. If p shows 2 the odds heavily favor us making 6h and if p shows 3 bid 5n asking for specific kings (If partner shows the club K bid 7n (at imps 7h is always ok) else bid 7h. The 4n bid gives us a LOT of preemption and still gives us a decent chance at bidding slam when it is there. It is NOT perfect but little else in bridge is perfect. Another benefit of the 4n bid is that we might be able to x the opps (if/when they compete) if we know how many aces partner has.

 

If the question is how to bid these two SPECIFIC hands I would not worry about it too much. Note that even if our side managed to reach a makeable 6h. All that bidding space might make it far too easy for the opps to find 7d which is far cheaper (no matter the vulnerability) for them than letting us play 6h. Even us stopping in 5h (like my suggestion above when partner shows 1 ace) might keep the opps silent and we would luckily wind up making 5 when the opps take the first 2 tricks off the top.

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With a long suit and little to no defense the first thing to think about is how high can one preempt. If we are bidding in a vacuum then going slow may make some sense but those pesky opps are always looking for a reason to enter the bidding. Look at the vulnerability. Ten tricks is a LOT of tricks that means the 5 level will almost always be safe (that means no more than down 1 no matter the vulnerability). This will not be popular but I suggest opening 4n (yes even with a void). Bridge is a game of %

with some science creeping in via slam bidding. This hand needs aces for slam and IMHO asking for them immediately is the best way to go. This is a straight blackwood since there is no agreed trump suit. If p shows 0 or 1 I suggest stopping in 5h. If p shows 2 the odds heavily favor us making 6h and if p shows 3 bid 5n asking for specific kings (If partner shows the club K bid 7n (at imps 7h is always ok) else bid 7h. The 4n bid gives us a LOT of preemption and still gives us a decent chance at bidding slam when it is there. It is NOT perfect but little else in bridge is perfect. Another benefit of the 4n bid is that we might be able to x the opps (if/when they compete) if we know how many aces partner has.

 

If the question is how to bid these two SPECIFIC hands I would not worry about it too much. Note that even if our side managed to reach a makeable 6h. All that bidding space might make it far too easy for the opps to find 7d which is far cheaper (no matter the vulnerability) for them than letting us play 6h. Even us stopping in 5h (like my suggestion above when partner shows 1 ace) might keep the opps silent and we would luckily wind up making 5 when the opps take the first 2 tricks off the top.

This being a forum for intermediates and advanced ,I fully agree with you,Sir.Your last paragraph is absolutely clear.

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What's the best way to bid this hand?[hv=pc=n&s=saq9h9d543ckt8643&n=s6hakqt876543dcq2]133|200|N is dealer. scoring mp[/hv] vul: none

Manifold dutch champion Kees Tammens once told me: you cannot ask me how tobid 9 card suits. I suppose this is also true for 1o card suits.

What about

2 - 2

4 - 6 ?

 

Maarten Baltussen

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You are joking, right? How many times have you opened a 10 card suit at a low level and not seen anything but green from the opps?

 

If you do open 2, what is your plan if it goes something like 2 - (3) - P - (6), where partner's pass showed values? Are you going to bid 7 in front of partner? Or make a forcing pass? If you FP and partner doubles, are you feeling comfortable about sitting?

 

I think Vampyr has a good case for a 3NT or 4 opening if that is on our card. Failing that, there are good arguments for any number of hearts with the possible exceptions of 2, 3 and 7. Hands like this tend to be much more about tactical opportunity than any scientific method. Indeed there is a good argument for varying one's way of handling them, sometimes preempting high, sometimes using a slam-try opening and sometimes walking the dog. I could be wrong but I doubt anyone here could definitively say that a particular approach was absolutely the best, even Fred, Mike or Justin.

This forum is for intermediates and advanced and I do not pose to be an advanced one.The OP has just asked the way to bid this hand and accordingly I have given my system of bidding.I had strictly mentioned that this is the way the bidding will go IF (and this is a big IF)the opponent are silent.However If the opponents intervene then then I do not mind forgetting this board or many more like this where opponents put the S ystem to a ditch.FULL STOP.

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Faute de mieux, could you not open 2, planning to rebid 4?

This is a matter of the rules, that are in place, sometimes it will be allowed,

sometimes not.

You have certainly a 10 trick hand, i.e. a gameforcing hand, on the other hand, it

is low on HCP, for that matter it is also pretty low on defence.

 

The suggested seq.

 

2C - 2D

4H - 6H

 

works, ... although the diamond void was never shown, make it a spade void, you are off

2 cashing Aces, they still need to collect them, which may or may not be an easy task.

 

There are system, that show you strong 1-suited hands, Namyats (3NT / 4C / 4D opening)

to show something like this,... but you have a 10 card suit, and a void, ...,

If you open on the 4 level, it will be hard for partner to go on, the given partner hand wont.

If you cant stand a missed slam go for it, but than refrain from asking, how to avoid reaching

the slam with 2 missing cashing Aces.

 

With kind regards

Marlowe

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What's the best way to bid this hand?N is dealer. scoring mp vul: none

[hv=pc=n&s=saq9h9d543ckt8643&n=s6hakqt876543dcq2&d=n&a=3N(7+ M 8-10 tricks)P4D(Try)P5D(Cue)P6H(P/C)PPP]260|200|

We play a convention popular in the UK:

3N = ART 7+ M 8-10 Playing tricks. Then

- 4 asks opener to transfer to his M.

- 4 is a slam try.

But it might not help us here.

South is unlikely to make a try but if he does, then the slam should be reached.[/hv]

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Manifold dutch champion Kees Tammens once told me: you cannot ask me how tobid 9 card suits. I suppose this is also true for 1o card suits.

What about

2 - 2

4 - 6 ?

 

Maarten Baltussen

I would open 6direct I treat hands like this as a goulash deal.

My philosophy is not what I can make,but what the opponents can make.

Opening 6immediately puts maximum pressure on the opponents

right at the start.

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Science is hard to come by when bidding a 10 card suit.

 

However, one strategy that works well in goulash games is to open this hand 1, then wait to see what everyone else bids. If your partner responds , at whatever level, bid whatever Blackwood variation that you play, and if partner shows an Ace, assume that it is in his suit and bid slam. The point is that you can draw inferences from the bidding (and with 29 HCPs and only three suits in the picture there will be bidding). The downside is that the opponents will have time to get into the auction and may outbid you, or they may raise the level so that a Blackwood investigation is impossible. At least you will get some indication from partner, either by a bid or even by passing, whether you should bid on to a making slam or to sacrifice.

 

The other option is to open 4 or more . Again, with out of the picture and 29 HCPs outstanding if you open at the 4 level there will likely be more bidding, but your partner will be the one who has to decide whether to pass, double or bid on and s/he won't expect 10. Therefore, if I'm not opening 1 I'm taking my full pre-emptive shot with 6.

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