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Routine 4333, or so you thought.


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I agree: at the table we’d know or could ask about the double

 

My opinion is that this should be for the majors, but most of my opponents seem to think it shows spades….I think that’s suboptimal by an unpassed hand and very poor indeed by a passed hand, who therefore can’t (for most) hold 6 reasonable spades. Doubling on a 5 card suit with too little to have opened strikes me as suicidal….we play redouble suggests playing there…opener has extras and a chunky 4card spade suit.

 

 

As it is, I think my call is obvious: pass. I’d rather try to beat 1S than declare 2S😃 and iN likely plays poorly for us, since they presumably have at least a fit in a minor, and at least half the deck, with the opening lead.

 

Also, unless the opps are on solid grounds as to what their calls mean, it’s unlikely North is sitting for it, and we can d3cide later whether to bid 2S.

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I guess it is the equivalent of a delayed TOX of 1C-1NT?

 

Opps likely have a minor fit and half of the deck, we have presumably a S fit and half of the deck.

 

Let’s say I pass and see where they run. But I’m probably bidding 2S after, even if partner doesn’t bid them. And then *not* Xing 3m if they compete.

 

This deal will not create a lot of IMPs anyway. Unless someone has an MP score of +470 or 530. Which at teams, with reasonable persons, expected flattish distributions and balanced strengths around the table, should not happen.

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At the table I'd ask about opener's pass of the double in case they have an agreement that's useful to me.

 

Absent specific agreements, I reckon partner should have spades, and probably both the majors. FWIW, my regular agreements would be partner's double shows spades, 2C would be majors, 1NT natural. I think my options are pass, 2 and 2 and 1NT

 

Pass must show spades and some values. But it does not obstruct the oppo in finding find the best minor in which to compete

 

2 shows spades but is vague on strength

 

1NT describes the overall strength but buries the spade fit

 

2 would be an unassuming cue bid opposite my regular partner. But here, too much uncertainty to risk

 

So, in the stated circumstances: 2, second choice pass.

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If X is takeout: 1N

 

If X shows spades: 2. I'm not going to compete to 3 with this shape (4trumps333, which tends to make total tricks < total trumps) and I want to make it as hard as possible for opps to find their best spot.

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south did not XX so I bid 2 now. south does not know what north has, except no 4M. north does not know what south has except 2+. why let them find a fit? partner has 10-11 with 44. why give the opps. room to find their fit by passing? if partner does not have 44 then I will find another partner. only logical explanation for X after pass imo.
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I didn't want to venture to the 2 level and thought 1nt may have some play, obviously my partner didn't have the same concerns.

 

[hv=pc=n&s=skjhkj97daqtckj85&w=sat53h842dkj9cq97&n=s962hqtd87532ca62&e=sq874ha653d64ct43&d=n&v=0&b=1&a=pp1cp1s(no%204M)dp1nppp]399|300[/hv]

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[hv=pc=n&w=sat53h842dkj9cq97&d=n&v=0&b=1&a=pp1c(2%2B)p1s(no%204cM)Xp?]133|200|

JillBean 'teams 1 denies a 4 card major, what now?'

I rank

1. Pass. Unwilling to confuse the issue.

2. 2. [/hv]

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