Another mastermind?
#1
Posted 2006-February-16, 11:07
Playing matchpoints in the club, you are playing against an unknown pair, but you guess they may be adv+ or so. (Edit: which makes it probably the only pair above intermediate in this field.)
Noone vulnerable, partner opens 1♠, and you hold ♠A98xx ♥JTx ♦QJ9xx. This would be strong enough for a 4♣ splinter (of course you may debate this, but let's assume partner wouldn't expect more), but I chose to bid 4♠ since the overtrick may well depend on the lead.
Sick? Mastermind? Reasonable?
Arend
#2 Guest_Jlall_*
Posted 2006-February-16, 11:14
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4S is ok in the context of your system (you cannot splinter...) but I hate it.
#3
Posted 2006-February-16, 11:14
cherdano, on Feb 16 2006, 06:07 PM, said:
Playing matchpoints in the club, you are playing against an unknown pair, but you guess they may be adv+ or so.
Noone vulnerable, partner opens 1♠, and you hold ♠A98xx ♥JTx ♦QJ9xx. This would be strong enough for a 4♣ splinter (of course you may debate this, but let's assume partner wouldn't expect more), but I chose to bid 4♠ since the overtrick may well depend on the lead.
Sick? Mastermind? Reasonable?
Arend
Sick. You could have a grand slam on. Partner wouldn't move with
Kxxxx
AKx
A
xxxx
Excellent chanes for a 13th trick in one of the red suits. Give him a small diamond instead of the ace, and you want to be in 6. He would not open then, you may argue. OK, give him ♠J too.
Roland
#4
Posted 2006-February-16, 11:16
Jlall, on Feb 16 2006, 07:14 PM, said:
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4S is ok in the context of your system (you cannot splinter...) but I hate it.
I must have been unclear. I could have splintered, but I chose not to.
Arend
#5
Posted 2006-February-16, 11:17
Jlall, on Feb 16 2006, 06:14 PM, said:
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4S is ok in the context of your system (you cannot splinter...) but I hate it.
I think you got this wrong, Justin. Arend could have splintered but decided against. So the system isn't sick, maybe 4♠ is.
Roland
#6 Guest_Jlall_*
Posted 2006-February-16, 11:17
This post has been edited by Jlall: 2006-February-16, 11:19
#7
Posted 2006-February-16, 11:21
Roland
#8
Posted 2006-February-16, 11:22
Many players (at least in my part of the world) use 3N (or some use 4♣) as a hand that is 'too good to bid 4♠, not good enough to splinter', and I would use that gadget here: note that opposite the usual 4♠ signoff, we have not given anything away in terms of lead: if you use 4♣ in this method, the ♣ shortness is coincidental: how do we splinter, you ask? We use 3 of the other major as a splinter in an unspecified suit: opener can ask by bidding 3♠, if our suit is ♥ or 3N if our suit is ♠.
Absent the gadget, I would be torn between the pragmatic 4♠, risking missing a slam, or 2♦, which overstates the hcp but allows partner to give proper weight to a high ♦ card or 2N (Jacoby).
All three of these bids are mastermind bids, but when you hold a freak and have no conventional method, you are compelled to do something that will lead partner astray.
4♠ is the most unilateral and thus, imho, the least attractive: I would prefer 2♦, especially since my void is in ♣ rather than in ♥.
#9
Posted 2006-February-16, 11:29
mikeh, on Feb 16 2006, 06:22 PM, said:
Many players (at least in my part of the world) use 3N (or some use 4♣) as a hand that is 'too good to bid 4♠, not good enough to splinter', and I would use that gadget here: note that opposite the usual 4♠ signoff, we have not given anything away in terms of lead: if you use 4♣ in this method, the ♣ shortness is coincidental: how do we splinter, you ask? We use 3 of the other major as a splinter in an unspecified suit: opener can ask by bidding 3♠, if our suit is ♥ or 3N if our suit is ♠.
Absent the gadget, I would be torn between the pragmatic 4♠, risking missing a slam, or 2♦, which overstates the hcp but allows partner to give proper weight to a high ♦ card or 2N (Jacoby).
All three of these bids are mastermind bids, but when you hold a freak and have no conventional method, you are compelled to do something that will lead partner astray.
4♠ is the most unilateral and thus, imho, the least attractive: I would prefer 2♦, especially since my void is in ♣ rather than in ♥.
Finally a chance to disagree with Mike. I would never bid 2♦ with 5-card support for spades. I would splinter which would describe my hand perfectly in my methods:
4♣ = void, around 9-11 hcp.
3NT would be an unspecified singleton within the same range (4♣ asks). Partner is always interested in a void; he may not be interested in learning about a singleton (4♠ over 3NT). Then the opponents don't know where the singleton is either.
Roland
#10
Posted 2006-February-16, 11:30
Walddk, on Feb 16 2006, 07:21 PM, said:
Now that is non-sense. I would be pretty sure to get to slam on this hand when it is right, since splinter followed by 4♠ pretty much shows the values of my hand, and I would always splinter at IMPs. (Btw, getting to grand would be a waste anyway in this field, as you could expect 80-100% for a small slam.)
In this case, I guessed that a loss of an overtrick is more likely than having slam on. I don't see what this has to do with partnership trust.
On vuegraph, I have often see successful players punt game/slam/whatever instead of consulting partner, when they probably judge an informative auction is too likely to help the lead and/or defense. However, I don't think it is easy to judge when it is right to do so, and that's why I am asking these kind of questions.
Arend
#11
Posted 2006-February-16, 11:33
Walddk, on Feb 16 2006, 12:29 PM, said:
mikeh, on Feb 16 2006, 06:22 PM, said:
Many players (at least in my part of the world) use 3N (or some use 4♣) as a hand that is 'too good to bid 4♠, not good enough to splinter', and I would use that gadget here: note that opposite the usual 4♠ signoff, we have not given anything away in terms of lead: if you use 4♣ in this method, the ♣ shortness is coincidental: how do we splinter, you ask? We use 3 of the other major as a splinter in an unspecified suit: opener can ask by bidding 3♠, if our suit is ♥ or 3N if our suit is ♠.
Absent the gadget, I would be torn between the pragmatic 4♠, risking missing a slam, or 2♦, which overstates the hcp but allows partner to give proper weight to a high ♦ card or 2N (Jacoby).
All three of these bids are mastermind bids, but when you hold a freak and have no conventional method, you are compelled to do something that will lead partner astray.
4♠ is the most unilateral and thus, imho, the least attractive: I would prefer 2♦, especially since my void is in ♣ rather than in ♥.
Finally a chance to disagree with Mike. I would never bid 2♦ with 5-card support for spades. I would splinter which would describe my hand perfectly in my methods:
4♣ = void, around 9-11 hcp.
3NT would be an unspecified singleton within the same range (4♣ asks). Partner is always interested in a void; he may not be interested in learning about a singleton (4♠ over 3NT). Then the opponents don't know where the singleton is either.
Roland
hehe: you're not really disagreeing, Roland: you are applying different specific methods: the question really is what do you bid if you do not have a specialized gadget (such as your 4♣ limited void response (no doubt far more frequent in Denmark than in Canada
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#12
Posted 2006-February-16, 11:35
Wouldn't dream of it at IMPs.
#13
Posted 2006-February-16, 11:40
4[cl] = void, around 9-11 hcp.
3NT would be an unspecified singleton within the same range (4[cl] asks). Partner is always interested in a void; he may not be interested in learning about a singleton (4[sp] over 3NT). Then the opponents don't know where the singleton is either.
Roland[/QUOTE]
hehe: you're not really disagreeing, Roland: you are applying different specific methods: the question really is what do you bid if you do not have a specialized gadget (such as your 4[cl] limited void response (no doubt far more frequent in Denmark than in Canada
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Arend said that he could have splintered but did not. Consequently, I prefer 4[cl] splinter. We do disagree, because 2[di] would never cross my mind.
Roland
#14
Posted 2006-February-16, 11:46
I think 4S is ok, but then I regular
miss slams...
Marlowe
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#15
Posted 2006-February-16, 11:51
mikeh, on Feb 16 2006, 07:22 PM, said:
Many players (at least in my part of the world) use 3N (or some use 4♣) as a hand that is 'too good to bid 4♠, not good enough to splinter', and I would use that gadget here: note that opposite the usual 4♠ signoff, we have not given anything away in terms of lead: if you use 4♣ in this method, the ♣ shortness is coincidental: how do we splinter, you ask? We use 3 of the other major as a splinter in an unspecified suit: opener can ask by bidding 3♠, if our suit is ♥ or 3N if our suit is ♠.
Absent the gadget, I would be torn between the pragmatic 4♠, risking missing a slam, or 2♦, which overstates the hcp but allows partner to give proper weight to a high ♦ card or 2N (Jacoby).
Mike, I don't see how I can show this hand after 2NT -- this bid didn't occur to me. I think the normal bids (lacking special agreements) are 2♦ and 4♣, and I would usually choose the latter.
I also like 3N as mini-splinter, but don't play it in this partnership.
Arend
#16
Posted 2006-February-16, 11:55
The 4♠ bid is at MPs in the posted conditions something reasonable this is why I think it is reasonable for the context:
Since the field is weak even if there is a slam I bet most of them will be in 4♠
Since this pair you are facing is the only good pair around if there is a good 5♣ save they will try to find it and the others probably won't bid at all
So you are in risk here of competition that the rest of the field may not face so blasting to 4♠ to simplify the situation is reasonable.
Luis
#17
Posted 2006-February-16, 12:37
However, given this hand has 6 losers, I think a splinter is indicated. And I don't have a problem with the singleton (slash) void issue. I play void splinters, but am dropping them since they never come up.
The void can be discovered later on anyway; I might get to cue bid it or answer a voidwood response to RKC.
Arend, in a club game I'd feel more inclined to splinter, since getting to the cold slam is going to be worth a minimum of 80-85% of the MPs.
In a better field there's more rationale for the jump. You'll make it tougher for them to sac, and make it tougher to lead a heart when its right.
A direct jump to 4♠ is also more appealing playing limited openings.
#18
Posted 2006-February-16, 12:57
Now we have a young bridge player who wants to improve and is thinking about these issues. The circumstances seem right to him (no good agreements for this hand, matchpoints, etc.) so he decides to try the same strategy. That seems a healthy attitude to me, but some of our starred posters say that this is "bad for his partnership morale" and that he is making "sick bids". How can you learn these things when you are not allowed to make mistakes?
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- hrothgar
#19
Posted 2006-February-16, 13:09
But if someone tells me I am doing this only because I don't trust partner, and will be destroying partnership morale, then I will ask him (in the appropriate level of politeness) to refrain from further replies. Especially since I wouldn't ask here if I had been sure these bids have been right.
Arend
#20
Posted 2006-February-16, 13:15
Hannie, on Feb 16 2006, 06:57 PM, said:
Now we have a young bridge player who wants to improve and is thinking about these issues. The circumstances seem right to him (no good agreements for this hand, matchpoints, etc.) so he decides to try the same strategy. That seems a healthy attitude to me, but some of our starred posters say that this is "bad for his partnership morale" and that he is making "sick bids". How can you learn these things when you are not allowed to make mistakes?
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At Imps playing in a team match where all the players are experts I think 4♠ is wrong I wouldn't call it sick and I wouldn't say it goes against his pd, but I don't like it. I also don't like the splinter and will start with a forcing raise of spades using 2NT or 2♣ or whatever you use for a forcing game hand with 4+ spades.
As I said previously at the posted conditions the bid is very reasonable.