4th seat just wondering
#1
Posted 2007-January-14, 18:07
Sitting in 4th seat, add the number of your spades to the number of your HCP. If that number reaches XX, open the bidding.
4th seat preempts are excluded from the scope of this survey (maybe 6 nice hearts, 12 HCP) - please assume you want to open this hand on the 1 level in a rather standard system.
George Carlin
#2
Posted 2007-January-14, 18:10
I am not joking.
#3
Posted 2007-January-14, 19:05
#4
Posted 2007-January-14, 19:18
Yeah, except that I pass the marginal openers with short spades
Peter
#5
Posted 2007-January-14, 19:25
#6
Posted 2007-January-15, 01:17
#7
Posted 2007-January-15, 01:27
Elianna, on Jan 15 2007, 03:05 AM, said:
My vote is "any opening hand, plus a few slightly sub-min openers that satisfy the rule of 15".
#8
Posted 2007-January-15, 05:44
My current style which I can be persuaded to change:
1st, 2nd, I usually open all 12's, some 11's (singleton), a few 10's (void). In 4th seat, I open 14 casino points with 3-4♥ or 15 casino points without. Except if I have a good 6-card suit, then I ignore casino points and open a usual opening bid. The following show some minimums:
- xx AQxx KQxx Jxx - 1D - 14 casino points, 4♥
- xxx xx AQxxx AQxx - 1D - 15 casino points without hearts
- x AQxxxx KQx xxx - 1H or 2H depending on partnership agreement. Not passing up a nice 6-card suit
#9
Posted 2007-January-15, 06:16
If you have 10/11 HCP in 4th seat, you will often find your partner with 11 HCP and a flat hand.
Contracts on 1/2 level can often be made with 18+ HCP, sometimes helped by opps unlucky lead.
The number of spades you have is irrelevant, you should open with (10)11 HCP in 4th seat whenever you have a decent distribution.
#10
Posted 2007-January-15, 08:23
#11
Posted 2007-January-15, 08:28
#12
Posted 2007-January-15, 10:41
brianshark, on Jan 15 2007, 04:28 PM, said:
The number of spades is irrelevant.
Is holding 3 spades short? I don't think so.
But partner holds 3.33 on average so opps usually don't have a fit.
You hold 2 spades: than it is 11 for the other 3. So each player including your partner has 3.66 spades meaning that 66% of the time opps don't have a spade fit. So you lose 2/3 times by passing.
Not short enough?
Suppose you have 1 spade, so opps have a spade fit on average, but with bad trump break and with the minority of HCP, so if they overcall they are likely to go down. So what should keep you from bidding? If partner has ♠ values he can bid NT on the same level or you can penalty double 2♠. If your partner does not have 4♠, your opps have a 9 card fit and you will have a 9 card fit or 2 8card fits. So if your partner has no NT bid and no double for 2♠, your side does not have wasted walues in ♠ and following the Law of Total Tricks you can push the bidding bidding to the 3 level.
Suppose you hold no spade:
If opps bid ♠ they are playing against partners 5 card suit and your side has half of the HCP. Wonder if opps like horror films......
Again if your partner has good ♠ values he can overbid NT or you will double. If his ♠ are not strong enough for that, remember that if opps have a fit (and it is almost sure they have a ♠ fit) you have a fit somewhere else and partner does not have a lot of wasted ♠ values. So you will make about any 1,2 and some 3 level contracts you like. The longer opps spades are, the better you combined hands will work together.
Again there is no need to be scared.
#13
Posted 2007-January-15, 10:47
♠void, ♥AKQxxx ♦KQxxx, ♣xx and the like.
#14
Posted 2007-January-15, 11:49
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#15
Posted 2007-January-15, 12:14
As for any numerical rule, I do use the rule of 15, but it is only one of a series of factors. If the hand is not a real opener, then I may open the hand if it complies with the rule of 15 provided that I have no rebid problem.... typically I have some ♠ length on these hands and will often be opening a (4+) 1♠... will I be happy to pass a 1N response...semi-forcing? I don't have to worry about dealing with a 2minor response, because I play 2 way drury... in fact I play 2 way drury in part to prevent a 2♦ response!
And as always, I treat hands with controls more aggressively than hands with Quacks.
BTW, the decision can be influenced by basic system: in my regular partnerships, a second seat 1N is either 11-14 (one partnership) or 10-12/15-17 depending on vulnerability. It becomes a lot easier to pass out borderline hands, short in ♠s, when partner has denied a balanced 10 or 11 count.
#16
Posted 2007-January-15, 12:39
#17
Posted 2007-January-15, 12:48
#18
Posted 2007-January-15, 13:19