Double or overcall
#2
Posted 2010-March-12, 02:02
#3
Posted 2010-March-12, 02:57
#4
Posted 2010-March-12, 03:44
#5
Posted 2010-March-12, 03:53
#6
Posted 2010-March-12, 04:34
George Carlin
#7
Posted 2010-March-12, 04:48
Roland
Sanity Check: Failure (Fluffy)
More system is not the answer...
#8
Posted 2010-March-12, 06:02
Why mess around?
With kind regards
Marlowe
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#9
Posted 2010-March-12, 06:09
I would x with
AQx
Kxx
in the minors (but I would like a little more).
I would bid 1S with AKQxxx instead of AKQxxxx in spades.
George Carlin
#11
Posted 2010-March-12, 10:53
4♠ seems to be a standout, 1♠ if you are squeamish about vul...
#12
Posted 2010-March-15, 14:20
Suppose LHO bids 5♥ over 4♠. How does P make a good competitive decision when we could hold either hand type for our 4♠ call? thx,
#13
Posted 2010-March-15, 14:24
bftboy, on Mar 15 2010, 03:20 PM, said:
Suppose LHO bids 5♥ over 4♠. How does P make a good competitive decision when we could hold either hand type for our 4♠ call? thx,
It is quite common, to have a wider range for a 4S preemptive bid,
the major reason is, that you dont preempt above game level, so
sometimes you can hold a hand worth a 5S preempt bid, but it is not
a good to preempt with 5S.
After they opened, slam becomes unlikely, so bidding 4S basically
only risks turning a plus score (3S) into a minus score 4S-1.
If they compete over 4S, the preemptor can use X to show a hand
with add. defence / offence, asking p to bid 5S with no defence against
5H or Pass.
With kind regards
Marlowe
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#15
Posted 2010-March-16, 08:15
bftboy, on Mar 15 2010, 03:20 PM, said:
Suppose LHO bids 5♥ over 4♠. How does P make a good competitive decision when we could hold either hand type for our 4♠ call? thx,
The gains of being able to bid to 4♠ with a lot of hands and forcing them to make guesses at the 5 level outweigh the losses that arise when partner doesn't know our exact shape or strength or whatever you're suggesting.
Usually partner will have a clear raise or a clear pass or double. Other times he has to guess, and sometimes we don't have the best shape to suit his needs, but thats bridge. Developing good judgment in these situations is really the only solution.
I would never give up the ability to bid 4♠ aggressively just to have accuracy in 5 over 5 decisions.
bed
#16
Posted 2010-March-16, 08:48
If the opponents bid on, one has the option of doubling to show that the 4♠ bid was made to make as opposed to a purely preemptive action. The double does not imply defense but normally one has a trick or two. Partner is then better placed to make a 5-over-5 decision.
With a true monster hand with both tricks and defense (for example, add at least the ♦A to this hand) one might double first before bidding 4♠.