jtfanclub, on Sep 11 2007, 04:56 PM, said:
Hannie, on Sep 11 2007, 04:43 PM, said:
Partner with 5+ clubs and 4 diamonds won't be afraid to support diamonds at the 3-level.
5
AT6
A432
K5432
Hmmmm...I'd be afraid. The clubs may not be worth a single trick, partner could have three small diamonds, it looks like my partner has 4 spades....
I'd chicken out. Would you?
no: and this is another situation in which a little instruction can take place: this time re the forcing pass.
2
♣, in SAYC, promises another bid. If I am mistaken in this, then what follows is nonsense
but I was certainly taught, many years before SAYC, that 'standard american' bidding of 2/1 showed 10+ points and promised another bid.
Since this means that responder has forced to 2N (any bid of 2major by responder after opener makes the hypothetical minimum rebid of 2
♦ is either a cue or a reverse, and hence forcing), responder is NOT allowed to pass below 2N.
If it weren't for this basic (?) bridge theory, pass would be far less attractive an option for opener, and I'd vote for 3
♦.
with the alleged problem hand of x A10x Axxx Kxxxx, I truly don't see the problem with 3 non-forcing
♦, especially if (as is standard in SAYC) opener opens 1
♣ on 3=3 minors. The only time 3
♦ is 'wrong' is if opener is specifically 4=4=3=2, and that is low-frequency on this auction, where the 2
♥ bid will almost always show 6... after all, the opps have no more than 17 hcp between them and we are assuming that the 2
♥ bidder doesn't fit spades... so how the heck can he bid a 5 card suit?
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari
1♦ - (1♠) - 2♣ - (2♥)
?