awm, on Jul 18 2007, 03:44 PM, said:
Bidding needs to be based on offense-to-defense ratio (ODR) and not just offensive value. While it's true that a hand with three-card support and lousy values may be equivalent offensively to a hand with two-card support and an extra ace, the second hand is much better defensively than the first.
Take the following three hands:
Jxx xx Axxx xxxx
Jx xxx AKxx xxxx
Jxx xx AKxx xxxx
It's certainly true that the first two hands will be worth close to the same number of tricks in a spade contract (the extra diamond king in the second hand compensates for the missing trump). The third hand is worth about one trick more than either of the first two. But the issue is, the first hand is much worse defensively than the second and third. If the auction continues with a competitive bid by opponents and partner has to decide whether to bid 3♠, he will be right to bid on either the first hand (3♠ likely down one, but their three level contract probably making) or the third hand (3♠ probably makes, their three level contract probably down one). He will be wrong to bid on the second hand (3♠ and their contract both probably down).
There is an additional issue when partner has "game try" values. On the first hand, it's generally right to reject a game try, and on the third hand it's generally right to accept. Easy enough. But the second hand is a pain -- if partner is bidding simply on power than you can probably make 3NT (but 4♠ can easily be hopeless). If partner is bidding on shape then 3♠ could easily be the limit (partner's shape not worth as much opposite only two trumps).
While I am the first person to preach the ODR gospel there are at least two other issues in determing ODR here:
Having intermediate honors in partner's suit and primary honors outside has a greater ODR than the other way around. Just as I commented that when you overcall on a 4 card suit your side tricks should be fast (Aces and Kings) the same applies to raises when you are short a trump, you should have good trumps and prime side cards. You should not raise on a short trump holding when holding quacks on the side. There are too many ways that can be wrong.
Second, Anyone who thinks that with KQxxxx x xxx Axx that its clear they should compete to 3 over 3 after the auction (1H)-1S-(P)-2S-(3H) has either missed a bridge lesson or their partner's 2S bid is much stronger than mine is.
From a Law analysis point of view, you think your side has 9 trumps and the opps have 8 or 9, probably 9.
First lets suppose its 9 and 9 and estimate tricks. Partner did not cue bid, so probably will only supply 2 cover cards, possibly a 3'rd, and occasionally only 1. So your side can typically take about 8 tricks, and the opps can take about 10. Your best available score here is defending 3H. You don't want to push them to 4H. If there are only 17 total tricks then bidding 3 over 3 might work out ok at mps (when you can take 8 tricks) but still doesn't gain all that much at imps, unless the opps make a later mistake.
Now even supposing that partner has the right cards and shape for you to be able to make 3S, such as Axx xxxx xx Kxx (an example of the purity adjustment to the law). Whenever spades are 3-1 in the opps hand they will make 4H (they have 6H tricks and at least 4 diamond tricks). Bidding 3S is total brinkmanship.
I think to bid 3/3 when partner hasn't cuebid you need extra offense and at least some extra defense (e.g. high cards) beyond what the simple overcall showed.
Now the 4/4 issue is totally different (and you might well get this one wrong). But how often have you seen the auction
1H-1S-P-2S
4H
Anyway, thats my two bits.