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How to find the best game?

Poll: Your bid? (48 member(s) have cast votes)

Your bid?

  1. Dbl (24 votes [50.00%])

    Percentage of vote: 50.00%

  2. 3S (18 votes [37.50%])

    Percentage of vote: 37.50%

  3. 3NT (6 votes [12.50%])

    Percentage of vote: 12.50%

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#1 User is offline   Gerben42 

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Posted 2007-November-25, 15:30

In a live team 7-board Swiss match against expert opponents you get the following pedestrian hand:

Scoring: IMP


Partner: 1 (4+ unbalanced, at least a Queen more than a SAYC minumum hand)
RHO: 3

Now what and why?
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#2 User is offline   whereagles 

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Posted 2007-November-25, 16:17

hum... well, there's a good chance pard has only 2 spades, so if I bid 3, he'll be stuck for a bid without a heart stop.

I'll just take that pressure off him. 3NT.
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#3 User is offline   Halo 

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Posted 2007-November-25, 16:25

Double.

Not a brilliant spade suit. Don't care if he passes.
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#4 User is online   mike777 

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Posted 2007-November-25, 16:41

Double

As usual with a tough bidding problem....double or cuebid. :)
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#5 User is offline   P_Marlowe 

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Posted 2007-November-25, 16:42

X

You search for a spade fit, and may find a
club fit, and you may be able to play 3Hx,
the only downside is, that you may miss
3NT and may miss a 5-3 fit in spade.
But treating this 5 card suit as a 4 carder is
not the worst crime.

The alternative, would be 3NT.

With kind regards
Marlowe
With kind regards
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
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#6 User is offline   inquiry 

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Posted 2007-November-25, 17:11

Looks like a fairly normal negative double to me.
--Ben--

#7 User is offline   Gerben42 

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Posted 2007-November-26, 03:25

41% for 3 now but none of the voters commented it. Don't be shy!
Two wrongs don't make a right, but three lefts do!
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#8 User is offline   Codo 

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Posted 2007-November-26, 03:38

There is a borderline between double and 3 Spade.
All would double with 4 Spades and 5 Clubs.
Few would double with 5 or even 6 good spades and 4 Clubs.

So the borderline is somewhere in the range of this hand.

Major rules, so I am with the 41 % and bid 3 Spade.
3 NT with a singelton stopper can work, but I won´t like it.
Double can work obviously too, but I doubt that we will find 4 Spade opposite Kxx,xx, AKxxx, Axx. (f this is in your NT range, make it KQx, xxx, AKxxxx,x)
Kind Regards

Roland


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#9 User is offline   catch22 

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Posted 2007-November-26, 04:01

Partner is unbalanced and 3S gets us to 4S when partner has 3 or 4 spades. 3NT when partner is 1-3 in the majors with a stop and the correct minor when partner is 2-1 in the majors. So 3S would be my choice

3NT doesn't feel right with single stop and the problem with double is that partner will bid 4C or 4D unless he has 4 spades and we may then have lost the spade suit.

Couple of questions back to the forum.

What is 4S after 1D-(3H)-X-(P)-4m-(P)-4S.

How far is 3S forcing? Can you pass 4m?
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#10 User is offline   Edmunte1 

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Posted 2007-November-26, 07:10

Double, keeping all roads opened. 3NT with Hx is too commital, and i don't like 3 with such bad spades and minimum values for a forcing bid
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#11 User is offline   brianshark 

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Posted 2007-November-26, 09:31

I have 5 spades and I have a GF hand. I will bid 3. Strength schmedt. We'd open this suit 1 easily enough. What's the difference?

I think the doublers are over-thinking the hand and 3NT is an unnecessary punt.
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#12 User is offline   Fluffy 

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Posted 2007-November-26, 09:47

didn't realise abou the strong opening, still suit is awful for 3, but the values are maybe enough. Double.
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#13 User is offline   mikeh 

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Posted 2007-November-26, 11:02

It is often useful to do an analysis of competing choices, and to then choose the least worst.

3N: could be right, but it is impossible to get to 4, which is likely the better game if partner has 3 or 4 spades (even if he has long hearts, LHO will probably be ruffing with a natural trump trick). 3N is extremely committal

double: right if partner has 4 spades. It may work if partner has 3 spades, depending on his propensity to bid 3 with that length. And it will work when partner can bid 3N. It will probably be fine if he passes as well, but my heart holding makes that unlikely. It will almost certainly be bad if he bids 4m: what am I bidding over that?

3: the hand is strong enough, given that my hcp are in Aces and Kings, the heart K looks as if is it well positioned, and partner has shown a good hand by system. So 3 is accurate as to strength, accurate as to suit length, and misleading, if at all, by reference to suit quality. It will get us to 3N when partner has a stopper and fewer than 3s... and I don't want to be in 3N when he lacks a stopper (even tho it might work: Kx xx AQJxxx Axx as an example). It still creates a problem if he bids 4m.. but I will have a higher degree of confidence than if I had doubled and heard him bid 4m: if he were 3=2=4=4, over the double he might bid 4 especially if his spades were weak... whereas over 3, he'd always raise.

On balance, I think that 3 is a more accurate description of my hand AND leads to simpler auctions, while double is a fairly close 2nd and 3N (which might win all the marbles on some hands) is a distant 3rd.
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#14 User is offline   han 

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Posted 2007-November-26, 12:28

What does double followed by 4S over 4m show? The only thing I can come up with is a gameforcing hand with 5 poor spades. I'm fairly confident that partner would read it as such.

Therefore, I don't understand mikeh's comment that double leaves us less well-placed over a possible 4m than 3S does, on the contrary. So I'll go with double, 3S being a close 2nd and 3NT a distant third.

I think that the main different between double and 3S is that 3S will sometimes get us to 4S when it is wrong (partner holding Hx in spades and Axx in hearts for example) while double will sometimes get us to 3NT when 4S is better (partner holding a heart stopper but also 3 or 4 spades). I think the latter is less likely (although 3NT could be silly if partner is 3361 for example).
Please note: I am interested in boring, bog standard, 2/1.

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#15 User is offline   mikeh 

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Posted 2007-November-26, 12:51

Hannie, on Nov 26 2007, 01:28 PM, said:

What does double followed by 4S over 4m show? The only thing I can come up with is a gameforcing hand with 5 poor spades. I'm fairly confident that partner would read it as such.

Therefore, I don't understand mikeh's comment that double leaves us less well-placed over a possible 4m than 3S does, on the contrary. So I'll go with double, 3S being a close 2nd and 3NT a distant third.

I think that the main different between double and 3S is that 3S will sometimes get us to 4S when it is wrong (partner holding Hx in spades and Axx in hearts for example) while double will sometimes get us to 3NT when 4S is better (partner holding a heart stopper but also 3 or 4 spades). I think the latter is less likely (although 3NT could be silly if partner is 3361 for example).

I am more than fairly confident that double followed by 4 does NOT show a gf hand with 5 poor spades. To me, that sequence shows a long spade suit (at least 6 times, and often 7) with a hand too weak to bid 3, natural, unlimited and absolutely forcing to game.

Yes, I know that by doubling and bidding 4 we are committing to game, but the difference is that double then 4 shows playing strength, based on length in spades, while bidding 3 shows power and 5+ spades.
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#16 User is offline   Halo 

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Posted 2007-November-26, 14:28

Very interesting thread.

I agree with Hannie. In a competitive auction double and 4S after 4m is exactly this hand. Doesn't make double right, but I'll stick with it.
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#17 User is offline   mikeh 

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Posted 2007-November-26, 14:43

Halo, on Nov 26 2007, 03:28 PM, said:

Very interesting thread.

I agree with Hannie. In a competitive auction double and 4S after 4m is exactly this hand. Doesn't make double right, but I'll stick with it.

Ok, I'll bite.

You hold AQJ10xx xx xx Qxx: your call over 3?

Then partner bids 4... are you really done here? Are you now barred from bidding 4?

Or do you jump to 4 over 3?

Or do you pass and pray partner (who is short(ish) in spades) reopens?

Or do you show a gf hand... which is fine when partner doesn't take you seriously, but may be problematic when partner plays you for values you don't have. If you think that the example hand is worth a gf, then make it slightly weaker...you get the point, I hope.

As a matter of frequency, non gf hands with long spades will be more common than gf hands with specifically 5 bad spades, so which hand type do you want to include in your methods?
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#18 User is offline   Halo 

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Posted 2007-November-26, 15:46

mikeh, on Nov 26 2007, 03:43 PM, said:

Halo, on Nov 26 2007, 03:28 PM, said:

Very interesting thread.

I agree with Hannie.  In a competitive auction double and 4S after 4m is exactly this hand.  Doesn't make double right, but I'll stick with it.

Ok, I'll bite.

You hold AQJ10xx xx xx Qxx: your call over 3?

For me if I am too weak to bid spades on your hand (or weaker for me) then I don't double.
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#19 User is offline   brianshark 

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Posted 2007-November-26, 18:04

What's wrong with the immediate jump to 4 after 3? Is there any response to the negative dbl that partner can make that won't lead to us bidding 4 on the above hand? It seems we want to play in 4 no matter what partner has, whether he has support or not, whether he's min or not. Aren't these hands generally shown by jumping un-economically and unilaterally to game?

Having said that, I'm still not sure what 4 followed by a double would mean. Perhaps some slam try with long spades?
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#20 User is offline   ASkolnick 

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Posted 2007-November-27, 13:43

How can double followed by 4S be a slam try in spades?

With any forcing hand and spades, you have 1 simple call:

3S, why, because its forcing? If you want to make a slam try, bid some more after this.

1D-3H-x-4m-4S It can't be a terrible hand, why, because you made a negative double forcing partner to bid at the 3+ level.

Therefore, the only possible meaning it could mean is a bad suit (usually 6, maybe 5 spades if needs partner to bid 3N).

The problem MikeH poses in his follow up, is entirely different the original
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