Posted 2012-April-05, 09:39
Nobody so far seems concerned about the 3♠ call.
I think we need to know a little bit more about any agreements in place re the 3♦ call.
It might have been a noise, showing values there and no heart stopper, or it might have been natural....one can't tell just from looking at the hand, since the hand fits both meanings.
If 3♦ was intended to be natural, as N eventually took it to be, then surely N should raise diamonds rather than rebid spades. From N's p.o.v., since he chose to bid 3♠ and that, effectively, eliminates 3N and invites 4♠, he should keep diamonds in the picture.....partner won't play him for more diamonds than this if he raises to 4♦.
Picture S with x xxxx QJxxxx Ax: unless this systemically is a 2♦ opener.....and many would say it isn't because of some combination of the suit strength and the heart length, then 3♠ invites disaster, since it invites a raise on a stiff. How else would we bid a monster 6=3=1=3 just under a 2♣ opening, or a good 6=4 blacks with good spades?
Even if 3♦ were a noise or ambiguous, 4♦ remains clear if N is unwilling to bid 3N. S isn't bidding 3N over 3♠, and N has committed to game, so it's not as if 3♠ is passable. I should clarify: if S has hearts stopped, such that he will bid 3N over 3♠, then his 3♦ bid must show real, long diamonds, and interest in playing in that suit, else he should bid 3N. And if S has that hand (and didn't open), then 5♦ rates to be a fair contract.
As for the 4♦ call, it was a gross error...this S hand isn't good enough to try for slam.
As for the pass, regardless of what 4♦ was taken to mean, passing was a violation of partnership discipline......you cannot force to game and then pass below game.
So I think N made two blunders to S's one, and that makes N mostly at fault.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari