Act? How?
#1
Posted 2009-May-21, 21:29
P-P-2♥-2♠
P-P-?
Assuming 2♥ is OK, act?
-P.J. Painter.
#2
Posted 2009-May-21, 22:48
#3
Posted 2009-May-21, 22:50
#4
Posted 2009-May-22, 05:36
#5
Posted 2009-May-22, 06:41
#6
Posted 2009-May-22, 06:56
- If pard has spades, our defense is great. Especially if pard leads a singleton heart
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- Finally, if pard doesn't have spades, opps could have a game.
I really don't see why I should act.
#7
Posted 2009-May-22, 06:59
Well, we have prevented constructive competition in spades and we may have been successful in pushing them into a contract that is poor for them, as partner is never doubling.
It is also likely that we have done little harm, compared to other tables, plus we have shown that we have a six-card heart suit rather than just five, so it feels wrong to me to gamble a second time.
So it's an easy pass for me.
#9
Posted 2009-May-22, 09:33
rogerclee, on May 21 2009, 11:50 PM, said:
So would I. I also would r/r against weak opponents.
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#10
Posted 2009-May-22, 10:17
rogerclee, on May 21 2009, 11:50 PM, said:
This is even a little too conservative for me. I'd probably always double.
#11
Posted 2009-May-22, 10:40
#12
Posted 2009-May-22, 11:27
jdonn, on May 22 2009, 11:40 AM, said:
I agree... with the caveat that I have never done this, nor ever seen it done at the table... if ever there were a hand for the action, this has to be it.
#13
Posted 2009-May-22, 11:35
#14
Posted 2009-May-22, 12:09
cherdanno, on May 22 2009, 12:35 PM, said:
I disagree... surely this is the type of double that we make as a two-way shot, rather than merely trying to find a fit at the 3-level? If I were asked, as responder, to describe a hand for partner after a reopening double, the actual hand would be very close to the protypical examples I would give. This should be a double that partner can and should leave in. K108x x Kxx Kxxx... I surely don't want him thinking he has to run to 3♣ here. I think we HAVE to promise defence for this very unusual call. if we do it with defence and without, partner cannot make an informed decision.
#15
Posted 2009-May-22, 12:57
On this one, partner cannot lose. 2♠ went down two tricks, apparently, so converting with a pass seems to win. Partner leads a heart, gets a ruff with a return signal, returns the clubs, gets another ruff (or a trump promo -- cannot remember heart split) and can cash two more tricks, minimum. Partner had something like 109-fifth in spades, club King, stiff heart, diamond Ace.
My partner opted to declare diamonds (Ace-something fifth), which seemed safer, and scored up +110. She might have dropped a high-tech trick Declaring, but the tricks she took seemed legitimate. Roughly an elopement. Ruffed a few spades on dummy, a few hearts in hand, took two clubs. Let's see -- heart Ace, Club Ace-King, two spade ruffs in dummy, two heart ruffs in hand, diamond Ace, and then some other diamond in the wash.
I used to be the "who bids again" type until called out. I'm firmly comvinced now that doubling is the long winner by a heavy margin.
-P.J. Painter.
#16
Posted 2009-May-22, 13:19
mikeh, on May 22 2009, 01:09 PM, said:
cherdanno, on May 22 2009, 12:35 PM, said:
I disagree... surely this is the type of double that we make as a two-way shot, rather than merely trying to find a fit at the 3-level? If I were asked, as responder, to describe a hand for partner after a reopening double, the actual hand would be very close to the protypical examples I would give. This should be a double that partner can and should leave in. K108x x Kxx Kxxx... I surely don't want him thinking he has to run to 3♣ here. I think we HAVE to promise defence for this very unusual call. if we do it with defence and without, partner cannot make an informed decision.
What about KTxx xx Kxx Kxxx? Would you want him to pass with that? (Personally I can never predict what partners will do with 4134 shape.)
I agree the double should promise some defense, but it should also hold some more promise for offense than two empty aces.
#17
Posted 2009-May-22, 16:33
cherdanno, on May 22 2009, 02:19 PM, said:
You cannot have that much more and yet still have a weak two.
-P.J. Painter.