Judgement Call
#1
Posted 2009-April-23, 09:31
A9
A9854
AQ9643
You open 1♣, partner responds 1♠.
At this point you can either make a reverse into diamonds or bid 3♦ showing a hand with 5=6 in the minors but insufficient strength to reverse.
#2
Posted 2009-April-23, 09:39
I'd suspect that most 6-5 minors hands you will actually see (with no competition from the opponents) will be similarly strong in some way.
So, you might want a better defintion developed for the strength of the 3♦ call, other than "not strong enough for a reverse."
-P.J. Painter.
#3
Posted 2009-April-23, 09:47
#4
Posted 2009-April-23, 09:48
#5
Posted 2009-April-23, 09:52
jdonn, on Apr 23 2009, 10:48 AM, said:
But, wouldn't you tolerate it if space was unnecessary because the bid was extremely well defined? I mean, I'd rather play a huge number of other things instead, and I agree with you, but the "eating up space" problem at least could be mitigated if the bid had a much better definition.
-P.J. Painter.
#6
Posted 2009-April-23, 10:38
kfay, on Apr 23 2009, 10:31 AM, said:
A9
A9854
AQ9643
You open 1♣, partner responds 1♠.
At this point you can either make a reverse into diamonds or bid 3♦ showing a hand with 5=6 in the minors but insufficient strength to reverse.
why not make 1♣-1♠-2♦ show the weaker hand?
Bill
#7
Posted 2009-April-23, 10:53
kenrexford, on Apr 23 2009, 10:52 AM, said:
jdonn, on Apr 23 2009, 10:48 AM, said:
But, wouldn't you tolerate it if space was unnecessary because the bid was extremely well defined? I mean, I'd rather play a huge number of other things instead, and I agree with you, but the "eating up space" problem at least could be mitigated if the bid had a much better definition.
No, because the problem is not only that you don't have room to have a good auction, it's that you are just getting really high. What if all poor partner wants to do is go back to your first suit?
#8
Posted 2009-April-23, 11:20
I'd never play the 3♦ gadget since it's definitely unsound and 3♦ as a minisplinter is much more useful.
Harald
#9
Posted 2009-April-23, 11:26
bill1157, on Apr 23 2009, 05:38 PM, said:
kfay, on Apr 23 2009, 10:31 AM, said:
A9
A9854
AQ9643
You open 1♣, partner responds 1♠.
At this point you can either make a reverse into diamonds or bid 3♦ showing a hand with 5=6 in the minors but insufficient strength to reverse.
why not make 1♣-1♠-2♦ show the weaker hand?
Bill
Because showing a 6-5 is more precise than showing a reverse. After a reverse you can still have all sorts of hands, so you want the extra space available to explore.
I'd be happy with both reverse and 3♦, but I think the hand is worth a reverse.
#10
Posted 2009-April-23, 11:40
If you can't see this... if you think I am being overly dogmatic and conservative, try getting a good hand simulator and generate hands consistent with the auction. If you are honest with yourself, I bet you find that the extra level of bidding you have destroyed would have been very useful... of course, if you pretend that responder should know you hold these cards, then I am sure your gadget will often work well
If I had agreed to play it I would use it expecting to be able to later say; I told you it was bad
otherwise, playing good bridge, I would reverse... yes, it is light, but it is pure in the sense that I have good controls.
When I rebid 3♦, partner will know that I reversed primarily on shape, not power. Now I am at the same point as if I had jumped to 3♦, but partner has had a chance to tell me something about his hand (and I might be in 3♣ over an ingberman or lebensohl sign-off).
For example, if, as seems plausible from the opps' silence, he makes a strength showing preference to 3♣, I am far, far better off than if he had made an ambiguous preference to 4♣ over 3♦... I mean... is that even forcing? or constructive? Or weak? Or all of the above?
#11
Posted 2009-April-23, 12:52
#12
Posted 2009-April-23, 13:01
I wouldn't worry about the loss of space for constructive purposes - 1C-1S;2D-2H or 1C-1S;2D-2S doesn't help me to decide what contract we belong in. With a 6-5, it's probably better to show my hand and let partner decide where to play.
#13
Posted 2009-April-23, 13:12
But, if 3♦ makes any sense as 6-5, I think you would be able to handle the auction possibilities better if a few additional rules were in place, like:
1. 0-1 of Responder major. Thus, if Responder bid 1♠, you would want to have 0265 or 1165, not 2065.
2. Great body. Hence, A65432 A5432 is completely not allowed, but KQJ1098 KQJ109 is perfect. How much body? Not sure. But, a lot.
3. Poor quick count. Not A-A-A-void, for sure. But, maybe not Aceless with two stiffs either. Not sure where the cutoff is.
4. Expectation of a four-loser hand.
Of course, making the bid not cramp the bidding in any way that hurts makes it never occur, but that's OK, because a lot of us hate the bid anyway. LOL
-P.J. Painter.
#14
Posted 2009-April-23, 14:05
The question was only if you had the method available to you what call would you make? If you could only bid 2♦ are you totally disconcerned or a little concerned? Surprised at the backlash really.
#15
Posted 2009-April-23, 14:21
Using 3♦ to show this hand has some merit, but it is not something that I use. I have a specific agreement as to the meaning of a double reverse - it shows an invitational to game splinter bid in support of responder's suit OR a hand too good for a game forcing splinter bid (the game forcing splinter bid would be a triple reverse - in this case, 4♦). I understand that others differentiate between a singelton diamond and a void in diamonds with their 3♦ and 4♦ calls, but I prefer to differentiate by strength.
In my opinion, using the double reverse for a splinter of some type is more useful than reserving it for a 5-6 minor suited hand, especially since the opponents are likely to be in the auction if you hold a 5-6 minor suited hand without great power.
#16
Posted 2009-April-23, 14:30
kfay, on Apr 23 2009, 10:31 AM, said:
A9
A9854
AQ9643
You open 1♣, partner responds 1♠.
At this point you can either make a reverse into diamonds or bid 3♦ showing a hand with 5=6 in the minors but insufficient strength to reverse.
2c the void in partner's suit worries me. No big objection to 2d, reverse.
#18
Posted 2009-April-23, 15:04
- xx KQTxx KJTxxx (or a hand just a tad stronger say AQTxxx in club where 4NT would be a misbid) . The key point is that the bid shows a high ODR . Here with 3 aces and no fillers the hand does not qualify .
In spite of the spade void I would still reverse (the alternative of 2♣ being even more of a misdescription). Not confident this will lead to a good result though
#19
Posted 2009-April-23, 17:06
marcD, on Apr 23 2009, 04:04 PM, said:
- xx KQTxx KJTxxx (or a hand just a tad stronger say AQTxxx in club where 4NT would be a misbid) . The key point is that the bid shows a high ODR . Here with 3 aces and no fillers the hand does not qualify .
In spite of the spade void I would still reverse (the alternative of 2♣ being even more of a misdescription). Not confident this will lead to a good result though
There you go! "High ODR" is what I was saying, essentially.
The problem with the OP was that we have a hand that may or may not qualify for a bid that means something ambiguous with a question as to whether we would or would not whip out the convention with that hand.
The answer is, "If 3♦ shows this hand, yes. If not, no. If you don't know, decide better what the bid means for next time."
-P.J. Painter.
#20
Posted 2009-April-23, 17:20