bid_em_up, on Nov 21 2006, 03:58 PM, said:
Partner also may hold x xxx xx KQJxxxx and look how much fun you are about to have.......
This auction and hand pattern scream the hand is a likely misfit. Partner is quite capable of bidding 4S on his own if opener passes at this point. To bid 4S, says three things to me:
1) Partner, I dont trust you enough to do the right thing if I pass.
2) Man, I really like playing the hand and pass just isnt in my vocabulary. After all, I am 6/5, so I will bid even though 4S is a total misdescription of my hand. Partner doesnt need to know that I have a second 5 card suit.
3) I am such a poor defender, I can't stand to pass and find out if we can at least go plus on this hand. Maybe scoring even more than our game.
And 4
♥ might make opposite such dismal hands from partner. Note that North's spades were AQJTxx, which will play for one loser opposite a singleton most of the time.
No one has yet to criticise the 4
♥ bid as it resulted in a big imp gain, but it really wasn't a good bid. It just got a lucky result. (x KQ8xxx Axxx Ax was the actual holding)
I think North has enough distribution to bid 4
♠. I think South should make a disciplined pass at this point. Sure there are some hands where slam is good, but we cannot get to every slam when there is heavy preemption. Alternatively, how can a hand that started off by bidding 1NT take control and bid 4NT? To me, that just doesn't make sense. If you take the view that your hand is not worth a GF, then it certainly is not worth taking control with.
Note that 4NT was the bid that turned a plus into a minus. You may say that 4
♠ was that bid, but give North AQJTxxx --- Kxxx xx and he's bidding the same way. You will have to start delving into what constitutes a 4
♠ opener vs a 1
♠ opener at some point, but hands that were going to rebid 4
♠ will still do so here.
I don't see why this is a question of partnership trust. This was simply a question of judgment. In my view 4
♠ is a somewhat wide-ranging bid. Many of the hands of a stronger variety (say, e.g. AKQxx x Axxx Axx) will surely double 4
♥ giving partner the option to defend. So it is more likely the bid will be made on distribution rather than strength.
So what about pass then 4
♠? That's a possibility. But note that (1) we are nowhere near a forcing pass situation. So partner will often not double and we will end up either defending 4
♥ undoubled when game might be making or they might make 4
♥ when we have a cheap sacrifice in 4
♠. Note that North does not know that South holds AJTx in hearts! But also (2) how is South to know that North's spades are good enough to play opposite x or xx? North merely opened 1
♠ and can having anything from xxxxx (with a lot outside) to AKQJxx (with little outside).
So I find your reasonings unjustified.