I bring this here from local forum, where the most respected players said that 4♠ is the bid. Is it?
3 or 4
#1
Posted 2011-May-06, 01:24
I bring this here from local forum, where the most respected players said that 4♠ is the bid. Is it?
#2
Posted 2011-May-06, 01:48
I might bid 4♠ because they are very unlikely to double me and they could have 130 available in diamonds. I would hate to bid 3♠ now and find myself in reopening spot after 4♦ from LHO.
#4
Posted 2011-May-06, 07:07
The problem is not just whether you will make 4♠ more often than not. The problem also is whether partner might act over 4♠ and get the partnership too high.
#5
Posted 2011-May-06, 08:44
ArtK78, on 2011-May-06, 07:07, said:
It is not about 4♠ making or not, it is about whether we have 10 tricks after it goes Pass-Pass-Pass, respectively partner passes.
I dislike ♦ xx, opponents will lead there and if partner doesn't have singleton (in which case he is likely to act anyway), there should be 2 fast losers. Of course he cannot imagine that we have that good ♠ suit. But we are 5421 13-count. I think this is clear 3♠, if we have 4♠ partner will bid them most of the time anyway. And it keeps 3NT in picture.
#6
Posted 2011-May-06, 08:48
the Freman, Chani from the move "Dune"
"I learned long ago, never to wrestle with a pig. You get dirty, and besides, the pig likes it."
George Bernard Shaw
#7
Posted 2011-May-06, 08:54
#9
Posted 2011-May-06, 10:11
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#10
Posted 2011-May-06, 10:15
ARTjoMS, on 2011-May-06, 08:44, said:
I dislike ♦ xx, opponents will lead there and if partner doesn't have singleton (in which case he is likely to act anyway), there should be 2 fast losers. Of course he cannot imagine that we have that good ♠ suit. But we are 5421 13-count. I think this is clear 3♠, if we have 4♠ partner will bid them most of the time anyway. And it keeps 3NT in picture.
Hi, welcome to the forums. A few suggestions (hopefully friendly):
1. Don't post a 'problem' and then four posts later start justifying your position. We are all (well, most, I hope) in search of the truth here, and not trying to lobby for one bid.
2. I think your namesake understands that a sim would have to consider all types of hands (and their relative constraints) that are passing 3♠ and we make 10 tricks.
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#11
Posted 2011-May-06, 11:29
ArtK78, on 2011-May-06, 07:07, said:
2. The problem is not just whether you will make 4♠ more often than not. The problem also is whether partner might act over 4♠ and get the partnership too high.
1. Not the best sim available, but here it goes (out of 10000 hands)
0.4399 pard has heart ace
0.4421 pard has club ace
0.4127 pard has club queen
2.7004 average spade length
3.5547 average club length
9.2304 average hcp pard
It seems pard is very likely to have 1 of the 3 key cards and odds are ok that he has 2. It's also a good shot we have either spade fit or club side fit. Since pard rates to have little in terms of distribution, it's not easy for him to find a raise of 3♠ when he has, say,
xxx
Axx
xxx
QJxx
or
xxx
xxx
xxx
AQxx
so I would say the odds favour an aggressive action, i.e. bid game right away.
2. True, but an experienced pard will give you some slack. Besides, the 6-4 shape gives us good playing strength. I wouldn't be ashamed of my hand if pard goes berserk over a jump overcall to game.
#12
Posted 2011-May-06, 13:25
#14
Posted 2011-May-06, 23:06
double red fit, S-short.
They would not have bid with no clue to what is working.
I like 3S, closer to what my hand is worth,
and let partner rate his hand: no wasted diamond, C-stuff.
#15
Posted 2011-May-07, 08:03
- hrothgar
#16
Posted 2011-May-08, 14:38
whereagles, on 2011-May-06, 11:29, said:
xxx
Axx
xxx
QJxx
or
xxx
xxx
xxx
AQxx
Why not:
xxx
QJxx
xxx
Axx
or
xxx
AQxx
xxx
xxx
I will bid 3♠ and be wrong on the hands where partner has no heart or diamond wastage and not quite enough to raise.
#17
Posted 2011-May-08, 16:29
#18
Posted 2011-May-08, 19:09
what makes this hand so good is its 64 distribution with solid spades. Yes indeed, p
will occassionally have the perfecto 3n hand but is far more likely to offer help
for a 4s contract.
Opps usually are hard pressed to X (especially at MP), with nothing resembling a trump
trick, so 4s is unlikely to be x very often. 4s also has the benefit of giving the last
guess to the opps and taking up a ton of space in case they want to explore for slam
(yes it is anybody's hand). P should realize my 4s bid is based primarily on good trumps
and an offensive (not defensive) hand since I failed to x then bid 4s so we should rarely
get overboard. Having the spade suit gives us some extra flexibility. 3s a sound average
call unlikely to win any prizes.
4s=8 3s=5
A more interesting question would have been what to bid if my main suit was hearts vs
spades. Off topic but then I would choose 3h precisely because I do not have the flexibility
I have with the spade suit. We need to save the 4h bid for the very strong offensive hands
with great hearts. Here ARTK78 points out a 4h bid could easily get us overboard. If the main
suit was hearts 3h = 9 4h = 2
#20
Posted 2011-May-09, 01:47
dboxley, on 2011-May-08, 23:29, said:
We're not bidding 3♠ on rubish, partner having a 3 card support and a side Ax (not in the preempter's suit) might raise.