ArcLight, on Jul 6 2007, 11:22 AM, said:
jtfanclub, on Jul 6 2007, 10:41 AM, said:
And my point is that, using what you say is standard,
CASE A:
P---P--1♥-P
1♠-P-2♥-P
P---X---P---P
and
CASE B:
P---P--1♥-P
1♠-P-2♥-X
P---P
Show *exactly the same hands*.
Uh, no they don't.
Its different hands that are making the double.
I added the CASE A and CASE B notations.
In Case A.
The person to the left of the 2
♥ bidder has 5 hearts and 10-15 hcp.
The person to the right of the 2
♥ bidder has 0-1 hearts and 5-10 hcp.
In Case B.
The person to the left of the 2
♥ bidder has 5 hearts and 10-15 hcp.
The person to the right of the 2
♥ bidder has 0-1 hearts and 5-10 hcp.
There are some other details too, but they all come out about the same. The same hand that would pass a penalty double also double for takeout across a pass.
The same hand that would make a penalty double would convert a takeout double.
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Also, I asked about a specific sequence, not a different one which you added.
Yes, and my answer is, it's takeout with an option to leave in, not penalty.
As for why it's not penalty, my answer is because there is *a different auction that lets you penalty double*. So having it be penalty is redundant. You don't need two different auctions to show the same thing.
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Hand 1 could be a hand that has 6 hearts but is not right for a weak 2. Perhaps it had a void or 4 card spade suit, whatever. Maybe it has Q J T 9 7 5 in hearts? plus some outside defensive strength like Q J T in a suit and another high card like a king.
No. nonononono.
Nobody has suggested that an X UNDER the 2 heart bidder is penalty.
For Case A, the balancing double shows a hand like: QTxx x ATxx Qxxx. give or take two points.
Remember, the guy under the doubler never got a chance to double hearts for takeout before. So he should have an ordinary balancing double, except that he can be weaker since both opponents are limited.
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Pard will balance at the 3 level when the opponents have a misfit?
If opener has a 6+ hearts, and you have 5 hearts, and responder passes (ie., not a void), then partner has at most one heart. So if he looks at his hand and sees a singleton heart, he knows there are only two possibilties:
1. Partner has 5 hearts.
2. They have a fit in hearts.
If partner has a singleton heart and 'four reasonable spades', then he knows in addition that they don't have a good runout to spades. Therefore, he can safely double. On the other hand, if he has crappy spades, he can see that 2 spades will probably make and let them play in 2 hearts undoubled (or bid 2NT).
Typical hands for case A:
Doubler (RHO of opener): QTxx x ATxx Qxxx
Passer (LHO of opener): x KJT95 Kxx AJxx
Typical hands for case B:
Passer (RHO of opener): QTxx x ATxx Qxxx
Doubler (LHO of opener): x KJT95 Kxx AJxx
So the guy to the left of opener doesn't need a penalty double- he can just wait for partner to reopen, because he KNOWS that partner is short in hearts.
The problem is the wishy-washy hands, the 2-3-4-4 types, where partner could easily have 3 hearts and therefore you have to bid now or forever hold your peace.
This is not unique to this auction.
Imagine that opener, instead of bidding one heart, had started with two hearts. Everybody agrees that a double here is for takeout, right? Well, why don't you need a double for a 12 count with 5 good hearts like the one above? Because you know partner is short in hearts. Therefore, if you pass, partner will probably X, and you can leave it in for penalties.
So if you made a direct X here for penalties, then the hands for
2
♥ X P P (penalty double, left in), would look the same as
2
♥ P P X P P (takeout double, converted to penalty)
I'm sure there are cases where the direct seat X should be penalty while the balancing seat X should be takeout, but they don't immediately occur to me.