Partnership Agreement Doubles
#1
Posted 2011-January-29, 09:26
If you would have to guess at the table, you don't have an agreement (even if partner would guess the same)
(Selecting an answer means "yes" other than the last one)
There's a reason I'm asking, and it's not to be rude (or polite) about how detailed your system is.
#2
Posted 2011-January-29, 10:02
#3
Posted 2011-January-29, 10:31
1NT 2♣ Pass Pass Dbl not sure if opener would ever double this for T/O.
2♦ Pass Pass Dbl is in our system script for art. opening bids as T/O vs ♦ and their 5+card suit. If this is the most useful agreement is something else but no point trying to agree something else and forget.
1♣ 2♣ Pass Pass Dbl would be T/O if 2♣ would be natural but again 5 - 5 majors have already been bid, so T/O seems weird.
1♠ 1NT Pass 2♦
Pass Pass Dbl: This one is just too weird, did that really happen? Was 1NT a psyche?
1NT Pass 2♣ Pass
2♦ Pass Pass Dbl = T/O as per meta-agreement.
#4
Posted 2011-January-29, 10:43
Just to be precise: We have no agreements on the excact sequences, but they are explicitly covered by a general agreement: "When an artificial bid is passed, double is take-out of the suit they have decided to play in."
I think we would both guess it to apply to 3) too, but as our 1♣ is 11+Nat or 15-19 any bal., it may not be 100% certain, that the rule applies here.
Edit: And our definition of take-out is: Not penalty, but urging partner to bid. How that should be interpretet in some of the sequences, might indeed leave us more guessing than knowing.
For instance in 1), I'd say 3-3-5-2 and very good, but that is just a guess, although qualified (in the context of my partnership).
Do not underestimate the power of the dark side. Or the ninth trumph.
Best Regards Ole Berg
_____________________________________
We should always assume 2/1 unless otherwise stated, because:
- If the original poster didn't bother to state his system, that means that he thinks it's obvious what he's playing. The only people who think this are 2/1 players.
Gnasher
#5
Posted 2011-January-29, 10:49
Perhaps one that should be added to the list is:
pass - pass - 1N - pass
2♣ - pass - pass - double
because to me this is a slightly different animal than the other choices.
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#6
Posted 2011-January-29, 11:23
#7
Posted 2011-January-29, 13:46
#8
Posted 2011-January-29, 14:08
2♦-p-p-
they have a long ♦ suit, I think you sohuld reconsider.
not aimed at anyone in particular, just saying...
this double should probably be 12-14 semibalanced, probably.
George Carlin
#9
Posted 2011-January-29, 16:46
2,4,5,6 are takeout, no problem.
3 is penalty. Can't bid a suit and then make a takeout double of the same suit later. Meta rule.
#11
Posted 2011-January-29, 19:07
#12
Posted 2011-January-29, 23:41
The third one is weird because it's a suit opener bid. Certainly playing strong club I would consider this takeout, but I'm not really sure what Elianna and my agreement would be. Probably penalty makes sense.
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#13
Posted 2011-January-30, 13:22
nigel_k, on 2011-January-29, 19:07, said:
Quote
Why does takeout make no sense? A 4-1 break at the two level is only a minor inconvenience.
No sense was probably an overbid, but we are getting bad odds for a takeout double with say 4432. The opponents are having a likely misfit auction, both majors are spltting badly and RHO could have made a big guess when he passed 2♣. I don't think I would reopen with a T/O-double here even with perfect shape.
On the other hand a penalty double could be juicy, because if we have clubs locked up, partner could easily have length in the majors and they will have nowhere to run.
#14
Posted 2011-January-30, 13:47
It's only crucial to protect if we can make game. If responder had enough strength for us to make game, he would normally have acted. With balanced values he would normally have doubled 2♣. The only good hand on which he might have passed is one with very short clubs, where he might be unhappy about defending 2♣x. If responder is short in clubs, opener will tend to be long in them. Therefore opener's double should be for penalties.
I'm not sure that I agree with that reasoning, but it's from the only book I've ever read that discussed this sequence, so I thought I'd share it.
#15
Posted 2011-January-30, 14:26
gnasher, on 2011-January-30, 13:47, said:
It's only crucial to protect if we can make game. If responder had enough strength for us to make game, he would normally have acted. With balanced values he would normally have doubled 2♣. The only good hand on which he might have passed is one with very short clubs, where he might be unhappy about defending 2♣x. If responder is short in clubs, opener will tend to be long in them. Therefore opener's double should be for penalties.
I'm not sure that I agree with that reasoning, but it's from the only book I've ever read that discussed this sequence, so I thought I'd share it.
A partscore-swing is ½ a game-swing. This is my own reasoning, but I'm not sure I agree with it.
Do not underestimate the power of the dark side. Or the ninth trumph.
Best Regards Ole Berg
_____________________________________
We should always assume 2/1 unless otherwise stated, because:
- If the original poster didn't bother to state his system, that means that he thinks it's obvious what he's playing. The only people who think this are 2/1 players.
Gnasher
#16
Posted 2011-January-30, 14:42
OleBerg, on 2011-January-30, 14:26, said:
Or potentially 100% of the matchpoints.
gnasher: Tear out that page, will you?
#17
Posted 2011-January-31, 11:56
Auction 3 is similar but differet in a key way, opener is unlimited enough that he might just have to double because his hand is too strong to pass it out. I would still expect bidding over this aution to be super infrequent, but if it happened I would take opener as extremely strong to where he felt like we were likely enough to make a game that he had to bid despite our pass of the 2C bid generally denying much in the way of values. I would expect opener to have good clubs obviously so I guess "penalty" but really it just shows a very good hand with game prospects which inferentially means good clubs.
#18
Posted 2011-January-31, 13:29
"...we live off being battle-scarred veterans who manage to hate our opponents slightly more than we hate each other. -- Hamman, re: Wolff
#19
Posted 2011-January-31, 13:37
But with something like KQxx AQx KQxx xx I might choose to double especially if not vulnerable. Most times we will have a playable spot and defending 2♣ will not be great. Partner may pass sometimes as well. I like to fight pretty hard for part scores even at IMPS. Anyway, even if you don't agree with a takeout double on that hand, surely it makes more sense than a penalty double.
#20
Posted 2011-February-01, 14:46
IF our defense requires responder or 2nd seat overcaller to PASS first and take action later with specific hands, after they clarify their suit, or make a preference, then pass is out of question when 2nd opponent passes the artificial suit. Which in this case DBL is considered auto.
This is not my agreement with my pds to be honest, i found these in system notes of a famous pair, they do pass with some strong hands vs a landy 2♣, and their direct DBL and waiting and DBL shows all different stuff.
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