Opening 2 Clubs What's next?
#1
Posted 2011-May-03, 20:25
♠AKJ
♥AKJT9xx
♦
♣AQJ
2♣-Pass-2♦-3♦
???
Let's say you just bid 3♥, what would 4♣ by partner be? What about 3NT? What would you bid over each?
wyman, on 2012-May-04, 09:48, said:
rbforster, on 2012-May-20, 21:04, said:
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#2
Posted 2011-May-03, 20:37
If he bids 3♠ or 4♣ (which should show OK suits, not 5-small or he should double):
For spades I want partner to have the either the ♣K or ♥Q for 6, or else after a club lead and losing finesse and ♣A knocked out it will be hard to draw trumps and ruff out the ♥Q and be back in dummy at the right time. I don't think I can find out so I'd just bid 6♠ hoping he has one of those cards (plus the ♠Q which he should have for his 3♠ bid).
For clubs, partner should have the ♣K for his bid, if he has the ♥Q as well 13 tricks look pretty good, but might be hard to find out, so I'd just bid 6♣.
#3
Posted 2011-May-04, 01:27
#4
Posted 2011-May-04, 02:45
Essentially if opener bids 3♥ we are playing the same as if the uninterrupted auction went 2♣-2♦-3♥.
A suit by responder after my pass does not show extra values or good suit, but does show at least 5 cards (otherwise dbl), 3NT would show at least AQx or KJTx.
"But I don't want to go among mad people," Alice remarked.
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#5
Posted 2011-May-04, 03:42
#6
Posted 2011-May-04, 03:54
Quantumcat, on 2011-May-03, 20:37, said:
For clubs, partner should have the ♣K for his bid, if he has the ♥Q as well 13 tricks look pretty good, but might be hard to find out, so I'd just bid 6♣.
Why? Does your partner have to pass with:
xxx
void
xxx
xxxxxxx
#7
Posted 2011-May-04, 04:38
#8
Posted 2011-May-04, 06:48
Hanoi5, on 2011-May-03, 20:25, said:
♠AKJ
♥AKJT9xx
♦
♣AQJ
2♣-Pass-2♦-3♦
???
Let's say you just bid 3♥, what would 4♣ by partner be? What about 3NT? What would you bid over each?
3NT = to play, good ♦ stoppers. (don't forget that 2♦ can be a relais bid (whatever system you are playing, unless other agreements).
4♣ = good 5card ♣, forcing
#9
Posted 2011-May-04, 21:02
the hog, on 2011-May-04, 03:54, said:
xxx
void
xxx
xxxxxxx
Do you mean he might be thinking about raising to 7♣? If the heart void was all he needed for seven, he would have started cue-bidding, not leapt to slam.
Flameous, on 2011-May-04, 01:27, said:
He needs to double. Opener's pass is takeout, after the double opener will begin bidding suits he can play in, and so can responder. it might go X 3♥, 3♠ 4♥, then either pass or 4♠ depending on if you think your partner has to have at least 3 for his pass.
Bidding a suit after the pass shows a suit that can be trumps without a huge amount of help from partner (e.g. Kxx should do as trump support). If you don't agree this, then you get into a nasty muddle on hands like this one.
#10
Posted 2011-May-05, 04:03
Quantumcat, on 2011-May-04, 21:02, said:
He needs to double. Opener's pass is takeout, after the double opener will begin bidding suits he can play in, and so can responder. it might go X 3♥, 3♠ 4♥, then either pass or 4♠ depending on if you think your partner has to have at least 3 for his pass.
Bidding a suit after the pass shows a suit that can be trumps without a huge amount of help from partner (e.g. Kxx should do as trump support). If you don't agree this, then you get into a nasty muddle on hands like this one.
What on earth are you talking about?
The op asked:
2♣-Pass-2♦-3♦
???
Let's say you just bid 3♥, what would 4♣ by partner be?
Who leapt to slam?
#12
Posted 2011-May-05, 10:40
the hog, on 2011-May-05, 04:03, said:
The op asked:
2♣-Pass-2♦-3♦
???
Ron.... Quantumcat is taking about the alternative course of action of PASS! ( for T/O ) by Opener... and then DBL by Responder:
2♣ - ( p ) - 2♦! - ( 3♦ )
p ! - ( p ) - X - ( p )
??
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 2011-May-05, 23:10
the hog, on 2011-May-05, 04:03, said:
Responder is not allowed to pass after opener's pass. That's what the word forcing in the phrase forcing takeout is referring to.
I thought you were talking about the auction
2♣ (P) 2♦ (3♦)
P (P) 4♣ (P)
6♣ (P) ?
#14
Posted 2011-May-05, 23:22
#15
Posted 2011-May-06, 00:47
aguahombre, on 2011-May-05, 23:22, said:
A 3♥ bid instead of pass should say I am not capable of playing in any trump suit except hearts.
This is why you have a problem after the rebid by responder: you ARE actually capable of playing in other trump suits!
Since the 3♥ bid should mean you aren't capable of playing in a different trump suit, a 4♣ bid by responder should be a cue, and possibly 3NT would be "I wish you had had a double cause I wanted to penalise!"
If you do decide that you are only worth playing in hearts (very reasonable) then after a 4♣ cue, you would be quite unlucky to not make 7, so I would probably be practical and just bid it (it may not make if he has 3+ spades and exactly 3 clubs).
#16
Posted 2011-May-07, 01:38
#17
Posted 2011-May-08, 17:25
gnasher, on 2011-May-07, 01:38, said:
It will be much easier for responder to make a double instead of playing the hand if he knows partner doesn't have a massive one-suiter, and thus has some defense.
e.g. you'd rather partner has AKQT5/KQJ/5/KQ87 to defend with than AKQT97654/8/-/KQ5.
Also, partner is better placed to know whether slam is on or not, if opener has passed rather than bid.
e.g. partner holds 832/A653/JT87/63. On the first hand you only have 11 tricks, and a double will net you somewhere between 1400 and 2000. On the second slam is as close to 100% as is practical, but you will probably only get 300 or 500 out of a double.
The two auctions:
2♣ (p) 2♦ (3♦)
p (5♦) X = 1700.
2♣ (p) 2♦ (3♦)
3♠ (5♦) 5♥ (p)
6♠ = 1430.
#18
Posted 2011-May-08, 19:55
Quantumcat, on 2011-May-08, 17:25, said:
e.g. you'd rather partner has AKQT5/KQJ/5/KQ87 to defend with than AKQT97654/8/-/KQ5.
Also, partner is better placed to know whether slam is on or not, if opener has passed rather than bid.
e.g. partner holds 832/A653/JT87/63. On the first hand you only have 11 tricks, and a double will net you somewhere between 1400 and 2000. On the second slam is as close to 100% as is practical, but you will probably only get 300 or 500 out of a double.
The two auctions:
2♣ (p) 2♦ (3♦)
p (5♦) X = 1700.
2♣ (p) 2♦ (3♦)
3♠ (5♦) 5♥ (p)
6♠ = 1430.
I don't think you understood what Andy meant. With takeout shape, it's fine to pass. But when you have a shapely one-suiter or two-suiter, you have to start bidding your suits - even if they aren't good enough to set trumps.
#19
Posted 2011-May-08, 22:02
cherdano, on 2011-May-08, 19:55, said:
Ok I understand now. That makes sense. The bid doesn't have to be a self-supporting suit, it is just a hand where you don't need your partner's opinion on the trump suit.
If you pass with a 2-suiter, you can still show it later: when 5♦ comes back to you (assuming responder did not double) you can still bid 5♥, 5♠ or 5NT to show a 2-suiter, since a balanced/takeout shape would double (expecting to be passed out most of the time) and a single suiter would have bid the first time.
The more I think about it the better it seems to give up on a slam in a black suit and pretend you have hearts and only hearts. If 5♦ came back to you and partner hadn't doubled, you would be stuck for a bid (5♥ should have two suits, and defending doesn't seem very appealing).
#20
Posted 2011-May-09, 02:12
In your preferred style, how would these two pairs of hands be bid, with the opponents overcalling 3♦ and then raising to 5♦?
(I know that the first one is a slam hand, but I'm not suggesting that we should be able to bid it.)