Support Double After Two Level Intervention
#1
Posted 2011-February-09, 21:14
Me: 1♣ LHO: Pass Partner: 1♠ RHO: 2♥.
I want to make a support double with my 3-card spade support. What should be my minimum point count?
I have read a number of online articles and no one mentions one.
Over a one-level intervention, Partner can rebid his suit at the two-level or retreat to 1N. This is competitive with our known minimum 18/19 hcp.
However, in this scenario, he only has 2♠ or 2N.
If he does not have that fifth spade then we are in trouble. After all, he has only "promised" 4 cards in spades and no more than 6-9 hcp.
I am of course aware that partner's opening bid is unlimited. I am looking at the worst case scenario here.
#2
Posted 2011-February-10, 00:54
The flip side of that is that if you have 3-card support and a desire to compete you can make a support double even if you are minimum. Almost any 3145 hand or 3415 with baby hearts is going to be worth an X here. But there is no law (in most partnerships) that you must double just because you have 3 spades. If you are 3-3-3-4 and minimum feel free to go quietly.
#3
Posted 2011-February-10, 15:27
Quote
Almost ? Could you give example of 5-4-3-1 hand with support which doesn't double ?
I like to play that support double is obligatory. If we don't want to double then we don't open (and I am a fan of opening EVERY 11hcp).
I could see merit of passing pathetically weak 4-3-3-3 but passing any 4-4-3-2 seems counterproductive to me.
#4
Posted 2011-February-10, 15:38
I usually would play support doubles as mandatory as long as partner can safely rebid two of his major. Otherwise support doubles are optional, and show an unbalanced non-Minimum or better (2♠ overcalls and higher).
#5
Posted 2011-February-10, 15:39
If you have a minimum opening bid, you pass if partner's call is nonforcing and decline any game invitations made by partner.
If you have more than a minimum opening bid, you should consider bidding again if partner signed off, accept game invitations and cooperate in slam going actions.
If you have a huge hand, you can bid a game or make some other forcing call opposite a sign off and do something intelligent if partner shows more than a sign off. You don't know if you have an 8 card major suit fit, so you can't just leap to game in the major. But partner knows whether you have an 8 card major suit fit. So give partner a choice of games.
*A support double is not, strictly speaking, a forcing call. But I have never seen one passed.
#6
Posted 2011-February-10, 15:49
I also do not like an obligatory style where I always have to show 3 card support, instead of making a more descriptive call, like showing a very long minor, however, in a lot of cases, I can get away with a support double and then do something else to show a good hand.
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#7
Posted 2011-February-10, 16:50
I think this is winning style in this game.
#8
Posted 2011-February-10, 17:14
bluecalm, on 2011-February-10, 16:50, said:
I think this is winning style in this game.
If I have 3 card support and an 8 card suit of my own, how is making a support double 'descriptive'?
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#10
Posted 2011-February-11, 10:41
#11
Posted 2011-February-11, 10:57
barmar, on 2011-February-11, 01:20, said:
Definition
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#13
Posted 2011-February-11, 11:47
ArtK78, on 2011-February-10, 15:39, said:
My partner (who was a passed hand) did correctly pass a support double and won a tasty 200 at matchpoints.
Never tell the same lie twice. - Elim Garek on the real moral of "The boy who cried wolf"
#14
Posted 2011-February-11, 14:27
bluecalm, on 2011-February-10, 15:27, said:
I like to play that support double is obligatory. If we don't want to double then we don't open (and I am a fan of opening EVERY 11hcp).
I could see merit of passing pathetically weak 4-3-3-3 but passing any 4-4-3-2 seems counterproductive to me.
One that wants to defend their contract, and passes hoping to pass a reopening double.
e.g. after 1C P 1S 2H
Jxx
KQ109
x
AKQxx
#15
Posted 2011-February-11, 18:27
#16
Posted 2011-February-11, 18:54
George Carlin
#17
Posted 2011-February-14, 15:55
#18
Posted 2011-February-22, 10:01
#19
Posted 2011-February-25, 08:17
Thinking back over the years, I'm struggling to remember a hand where this philosophy cost me a board. But the hands where it wins seems to come up almost every session.
#20
Posted 2011-February-25, 09:43
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Also, remember that a take out dbl will often contain 3 card support. Responder, if in lack of a better bid, may try rebidding his 5 card major.