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Is sandbagging a psyche bid?


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That acbl restriction of not passing with hand of same shape but fewer points only applies to opening one level bids.

 

I imagine you mean in the sense that a one level opening can be weaker than pass.

If so, that is equivalent to a clause of the WBF HUM definition which for many RAs means forbidden in most or all competitions.

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In ACBL it is illegal to agree to pass X HCP if your partnership would agree to open a hand with fewer HCP but the exact same shape.

Yet the most recent Bulletin has an article by Larry Cohen on hand evaluation that explains that Work HCP undervalues ace and tens. They've also published articles saying that honors in long suits are more valuable, touching honors and tenaces are better than honors in different suits, etc.

 

I don't think that rule is intended to be precise to a single point or disallow judgement about suit quality.

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1. Answering the original question, I don't know. It's a style thing that the opponents need to know about, but I'm not sure where you can (except when he game-forces your 3rd seat opener, and you're waiting for the opening lead, this tendency is discloseable and should be disclosed).

 

2. For those who complain about ACBL regulations, which is a game that has been enjoyed by thousands for over 40 years, it's a lot harder now. Because they've been very careful. But you also have to be very careful, and read the entire section. The Open(+) charts say, as far as disallowed:

 

An opening pass in first or second seat that could be a stronger hand than an

opening 1-level bid with the same shape; i.e., if two hands are exactly the same except

that an honour is replaced with a low card in the same suit, you cannot open the hand

with the low card and pass the hand with an honour.

 

The explanation (i.e., "that is") makes it clear: If you open AQxxx AJxx xx xx you can absolutely pass Qxxxx Qxxx KQ QJ - but you can't pass AQxxx AJxx xx Jx or AQJxx AJxx xx xx. And the examples provided also help:

 

  1. [Restriction 2] An opening pass cannot have a split Range, such as 0-7 or 13-15
    balanced.
  2. [Restriction 2] You can pass hands with certain shapes even if you open other shapes
    with fewer high card points. For example, if you played an opening 2D showing any 4-4-
    4-1 with 15+ HCP, you could agree to pass all weaker 4-4-4-1 hands, even if your other
    1-level openings could be much weaker than 15 HCPs, provided they could not be 4-4-
    4-1.

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So if it is ok to open

 

AQxxx

AJxx

xx

xx

 

it becomes illegal to pass

 

Qxxxx

Qxxx

KQ

QJ

 

ridiculous!

Repeating something doesn't make it true.

 

IIRC, the bidding charts were written that way to outlaw forcing pass systems where an opening pass is equivalent to a standard opening bid. You are welcome to use your judgement and pass a 12 HCP with the caveat that partner should not play you for a better hand if you pass than if you bid.

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I would always pass a 12-point 4-4-4-1, and possibly even with 13. Playing Acol with 12-14 NT, I cannot rebid my suit if partner responds in my singleton. With 14, I might risk NT. I'd welcome suggestions - this is my least-favourite hand shape.

Always pass 4-4-4-1 hands no matter how many points you have. The directors will thank you for keeping the game moving quickly.

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From first K-S book: no 1.5 quick tricks,no opening. 11.10 CCCC points. Kaplan would NOT open it as dealer.

 

For that matter, in early Roth-Stone, an opening required 2 defensive tricks, separately from the point count requirement.

 

CCCC does not apply to balanced hands

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I would always pass a 12-point 4-4-4-1, and possibly even with 13. Playing Acol with 12-14 NT, I cannot rebid my suit if partner responds in my singleton. With 14, I might risk NT. I'd welcome suggestions - this is my least-favourite hand shape.

In my regular partnerships I have always played that 1 - 2; 2 is forcing for one round and may explicitly be only a 4 card suit. This obviously requires an alert. The more mainstream solution to this shape is to open 1 and rebid 2 over 2, meaning that this sequence does not promise 5 hearts.

 

Other 4441 shapes provide no difficulty in Acol - open 1=4=4=4 1, 4=4=1=4 1 and 4=1=4=4 with whichever minor suit you prefer. My preference with the 4=1=4=4 is the traditional suit-under-the-singleton 1, which makes life a little easier on the auction 1X - (1) - X - (P) but enough play up-the-line for the 1 opening to be a perfectly acceptable approach.

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