Double is terrible...I'd rather pass than double. (I'd rather bid 1
♦ than pass, but maybe that has a conventional meaning in your system).
Note, though, that this is nowhere near as bad as it looks, disaster or not. Give partner just a slightly stronger hand:
♠J8
♥JT2
♦A9832
♣AKQ
And now 4 spades makes all night. Heck, it may make 5.
I don't think many people will double with that hand either, though it's closer.
My point is that 4
♠ is clearly the right bid. Even if your partner is stretching a little you should still have good play for the hand.
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On an unrelated note, it really bugs me when people start a post with "whose fault is it". It's just not the right mindset to take. Sometimes the right bid gets you a -800.
An example from an earlier thread: 1
♦ (2
♣) P P.
Ron and quite a few others were arguing that you should double with short clubs, regardless of strength.
Sometimes, that's a disaster. Maybe the 2
♣ bidder has a max and now they find their game (or slam). Maybe your partner has 3-3-2-5 distribution and no offensive tricks and you're going to go -4 doubled.
If you're an expert, you laugh about it and go onto the next hand. The fact that a bid will on rare occassions lead to an impressive bottom shouldn't stop you from using it.
But if you're a beginner, this is horrible. You each start blaming the other, recriminations abound, and you start questioning your system. The next time it comes up, you try to 'correct' your system, it leads to a bad result, and now things get worse.
The sooner you get away from "whose fault", and into "how can we do this better", the better off you'll be.
And the sooner you can stop requiring reopening doubles to show extra strength