AT(R/B) (Almost) Cold Slam Missed
#1
Posted 2010-December-19, 19:08
#2
Posted 2010-December-19, 19:46
George Carlin
#3
Posted 2010-December-19, 19:55
#4
Posted 2010-December-19, 20:00
#5
Posted 2010-December-19, 20:39
gwnn, on 2010-December-19, 19:46, said:
mikestar13, on 2010-December-19, 19:55, said:
South may not technically have 16 HCP, but ♥AKQJ86 and ♠A begs a 3♥ rebid. I blame South fully, and see no justification for any bid OTHER than 3♥.
"Learn from the mistakes of others. You won't live long enough to make them all yourself."
"One advantage of bad bidding is that you get practice at playing atrocious contracts."
-Alfred Sheinwold
#6
Posted 2010-December-19, 21:35
#7
Posted 2010-December-19, 22:30
www.longbeachbridge.com
#9
Posted 2010-December-20, 03:58
No blame.
One can give North 5 spades Kx in diamonds, and KQx in clubs,
he would bid the same way, and after a diamond lead even 5 can
go down.
The hands fit very well.
With kind regards
Marlowe
PS: I think South is supermax for a 2H call, and I may bid 3H on
some days, but this is a matter of agreement / style.
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#10
Posted 2010-December-20, 04:24
P_Marlowe, on 2010-December-20, 03:58, said:
Equally, you could change North's hand to KQ10xxx 10xx x Axx and slam would be just as good.
Quote
That would get you to slam opposite xx AKQJxx Ax J10x (or, if that's not enough, xx AKQJxxx Ax xx). Do you want to be in that?
I don't think this is as easy as people's answers seem to assume.
#11
Posted 2010-December-20, 04:25
It's my experience that you rarely benefit from bidding 1♠ if you have ♥ support.
Depending on your agreements North could (mini-)splinter or whatever you do to show a GF rise, after that finding the slam is possible.
#12
Posted 2010-December-20, 05:34
1H - 1S
2C/D/H - 2S! = artificial GF ??
TWOferBRIDGE
"imo by far in bridge the least understood concept is how to bid over a jump-shift
( 1M-1NT!-3m-?? )." ....Justin Lall
" Did someone mention relays? " .... Zelandakh
K-Rex to Mikeh : " Sometimes you drive me nuts " .
#13
Posted 2010-December-20, 05:43
-- Bertrand Russell
#14
Posted 2010-December-20, 05:55
gnasher, on 2010-December-20, 04:24, said:
There has been four bids made by the partnership and we have been asked to name the call that lead to this less than optimal contract. I think it is clear that this is the 2♥ bid. Whether or not it would have sufficed to rebid 3♥ is another question and is not strictly germane to the assign the blame task. If there were a 10% chance of finding this slam after 3♥ and a 0% chance after 2♥, the blame is still 100% for South. And this is ignoring the possibility of missing excellent games (and the very unlikely possibility of getting too high) - in other words, concentrating on why the outcome on this particular pair of hands left a bit to be desired.
George Carlin
#15
Posted 2010-December-20, 07:57
#16
Posted 2010-December-20, 10:23
Both players are maximum for their bids. It is inherent in bidding practice, if not theory, that when both players are minimum for their actions, they will overeach on many hands, and the corollary is that when both players are maximum, they will be too low on many hands.
I wouldn't object to 3♥ as South, on round 2...I might even choose that bid myself...I tend to junp rebid a little lighter than most, despite being, overall, on the conservative side. But to label 2♥ as 'silly' is an overbid in 2/1 methods imo.
Over 2♥, N could, I suppose, splinter, but splintering with minimal gf values in a stiff K suit seems odd.
I wouldn't blame anyone but, as S, I'd put this hand in the memory hopper as a suggestion that maybe next time I loosen up a little on my 3♥ rebid requirements.
This thread reminds me of a point I tried to make a week or so ago: I give the responsiblity for missing slam to S, who could have taken action that would have resulted in slam, but I don't blame him for not doing so.
#17
Posted 2010-December-20, 11:07
So anyway, thanks for the responses... I was North, and considered a splinter, but I think that a splinter should be stronger, and will often get us too high. If I held my partner's cards as South, I'd probably have rebid 2♥ as well, but perhaps 3♥ on a good day. My partner felt I should have splintered in ♦. I thought there was very little blame to go around, but if any, partner could have rebid 3♥.
A more interesting problem I suppose would be if I posted the S hand as a rebid problem...
#18
Posted 2010-December-21, 07:09
gwnn, on 2010-December-20, 05:55, said:
Disagree. Mtvesuvius asked who misbid, which is both entirely different and much more interesting.
- hrothgar
#19
Posted 2010-December-21, 07:16
han, on 2010-December-21, 07:09, said:
I don't want to sound like mgoetze on purpose but is it really "entirely different" ? Surely there is a great deal of correlation between misbids and bids that lead to a less than optimal contract?!
That said, I concede that my paraphrasing was somewhat inaccurate. Anyway, out of the four bids it is clear to me that three of them are good bids and one of them is a misbid. If we miss slam after 3♥ some amount of the time, it does not mean that 2♥ is not a misbid, which was my point. Do you agree with that?
George Carlin
#20
Posted 2010-December-21, 07:36
-P.J. Painter.