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From NZ round of 16

#1 User is offline   Quantumcat 

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Posted 2012-October-08, 23:38

You have:
J73
4
AKT32
AK43

RHO opens 1. You can overcall 2 natural, if you wish. We usually have a very good six card diamond suit (or club suit for 2 over 1) for this, since partner almost never has support. Other bids: a double would show 16+ any shape (except takeout shape) and a 1NT overcall would be takeout.

Auction continues 1 from LHO, 1NT from RHO (they are playing a 14-16 1NT opening). Do you bid now?

If you still pass, the auction continues 2 from LHO, pass from RHO. Do you bid now?

I considered a double, but partner might have four good hearts or even five, and not a lot of strength (and won't be expecting so much from me), and won't be able to pass out the double when they go off. He might even bid a bad four card spade suit or heaven help us a three card suit, all when 2 was going off. On the plus side when he has equal minors or 1-card longer clubs he will bid 2NT, expecting me to bid clubs with equal length.

All in all I decided to pass, being content if 2 went off one or two.

What would you do differently, and please give some good reasons :-)

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#2 User is offline   Codo 

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Posted 2012-October-09, 00:44

Yours partners first bid was simply wrong (or you need methods to show his handtype...) and you cannot recover from that failure.

Anyway, within your methods- which I do not like-you needed to pass first, any other bid looks horrible. I must admit that I would feal unhappy in a standard system too, having to choose between pass and 1 NT.

So in the second round, you should have doubled- surely a take out of hearts. The obvious downside are the three weak spades.. But you cannot wait for perfect hands. At least the three card suit will ruff the hearts.

In the third round, failing to bid the first two rounds, I would take X as a weak take out with good shape. Hardly your hand anymore.

So, despite the failure to double 1 NT- the major crime was partners first bid.
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Roland


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#3 User is offline   nigel_k 

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Posted 2012-October-09, 00:48

Your partner should definitely have bid 2 the second time, if not the first time. I would also have doubled 1NT with your hand. This should be takeout of hearts, but if not it's a penalty double which also fits.
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#4 User is offline   Cyberyeti 

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Posted 2012-October-09, 03:24

View Postnigel_k, on 2012-October-09, 00:48, said:

Your partner should definitely have bid 2 the second time, if not the first time. I would also have doubled 1NT with your hand. This should be takeout of hearts, but if not it's a penalty double which also fits.

Your methods are horrible, but Nigel sums up my feelings pretty accurately. Who was vulnerable ? I'd certainly have bid 2 first time NV with partner's hand. X should be T/O of hearts, because 95% of the time, any hand that wants to make a penalty double of 1N is 16+ or has a suit to overcall, so didn't pass first time.
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#5 User is offline   PhilKing 

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Posted 2012-October-09, 05:03

I play a delayed overcall of 2 showing five diamonds and four (or five) clubs and a good hand (what else can it sensibly show?). This hand fits the bill!

I don't like doubling 1NT (take-out of hearts) with only Jxx of spades - after all partner never has five decent spades, let alone six. If I double he will bid 2 with a 4441 shape, for instance, which is unlikely to be a success.

I understand your reluctance to double 2. It seems obvious to double and "everyone" does it, but my impression is that it turns out badly as often as not. After all, what is partner to do on a 3433 hand with modest hearts? He bids 2 - marv!

What on earth was partner's rationale for not overcalling? I assume he was the worst player in the room - after all he had no clue what you had untill he saw the hand record. :(
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#6 User is offline   Codo 

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Posted 2012-October-09, 05:18

I would take my chance in 2 opposite a 4441 or 4414 hand. Chances are good, that this plays as good as 3 .
Kind Regards

Roland


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#7 User is offline   billw55 

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Posted 2012-October-09, 07:02

Sounds like a typical blunder-and-blame-partner coup by CHO.
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#8 User is offline   neilkaz 

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Posted 2012-October-09, 13:11

Q-cat wrote: "it was somewhat depressing and I didn't play my best in the third set :-("

I cannot stress enough the benefits trying to develop the mental toughness to overcome thoughts about mistakes that you may have made and not let them affect the rest of the day's play. This problem used to affect both my backgammon and my bridge, but about 20 years ago, when I first got onto the trading floor I quickly learned to conquer this weakness. I'd made a big trade and in five seconds the stock I needed to hedge was 50 cents higher and the end result was that I'd pissed away $3,500 in five seconds. Well, I toughened up since what was done was done, and just concentrated and worked harder and ended up ahead for the day. This also helped me learn to put similar thoughts out of mind when playing BG where sometimes you quickly know that you've blundered (OMG how did I not see that play?) or more often you think that you may have erred as the dice quickly ruin your chosen play and path, but wouldn't rewarded the alternative. I've also become more alert when playing bridge to not do what your partner did to you and depress you by making you think you erred.

OK back to the OP hand. While I'd certainly not pass out 2 in P.O. seat and a good case can be made for some action earlier, your partner was dealt a routine weak 2 opener and should at some point, either initially with 2 or even 1 or on his 2nd turn, entered the action by bidding . At least 2/3 of the blame for the missed game goes to PD, IMHO and rather than berating you for passing, he should admit that he could've mentioned his great suit.

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#9 User is offline   ggwhiz 

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Posted 2012-October-09, 13:19

View Postbillw55, on 2012-October-09, 07:02, said:

Sounds like a typical blunder-and-blame-partner coup by CHO.


Absolutely! Although I would have doubled 2 in the end that will only get us to a partscore since partner has at least 2 of his spades sorted into the club suit.
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#10 User is offline   quiddity 

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Posted 2012-October-09, 14:54

A lot of replies are focusing on your partner's bidding but you can't control that. All you can do is bid your own hand as best you can, and it really is indefensible to pass throughout with a good 15-count and a stiff heart.
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#11 User is offline   mike777 

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Posted 2012-October-09, 15:06

View Postquiddity, on 2012-October-09, 14:54, said:

A lot of replies are focusing on your partner's bidding but you can't control that. All you can do is bid your own hand as best you can, and it really is indefensible to pass throughout with a good 15-count and a stiff heart.



ditto
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#12 User is offline   Cyberyeti 

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Posted 2012-October-09, 15:07

View Postquiddity, on 2012-October-09, 14:54, said:

A lot of replies are focusing on your partner's bidding but you can't control that. All you can do is bid your own hand as best you can, and it really is indefensible to pass throughout with a good 15-count and a stiff heart.

Yes if you're playing a system that makes it very difficult to bid.

I'd double 1N if I had to, but not sure it would be understood.
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#13 User is offline   Codo 

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Posted 2012-October-10, 01:22

View Postquiddity, on 2012-October-09, 14:54, said:

A lot of replies are focusing on your partner's bidding but you can't control that. All you can do is bid your own hand as best you can, and it really is indefensible to pass throughout with a good 15-count and a stiff heart.


Sorry but this is not true. If partner cannot hold certain hand types, it will influence your bidding. In the given hand, a take out double should be made, even with a passed partner. But it had surely been a little bit easier, if partner had not denied a good spade suit already.

And he surely made the first and by far biggest mistake.
Kind Regards

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#14 User is offline   Quantumcat 

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Posted 2012-October-10, 04:21

I've spoken to my partner and he pointed out that he actually held KQT97 xxx Qx xxx, not KQT986 xxx Qx Jx. Obviously he would have bid with six spades, I just remembered his hand wrongly.

Also, he said I should have mentioned that 1 was artificial, showing 1+ diamonds.
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#15 User is offline   Codo 

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Posted 2012-October-10, 04:55

This makes quite a difference. :rolleyes:
Now he could still have bid 2 or 1 and I guess that many here would bid it- but to pass with this hand would be the choice of the majority of bridge players.

Over your double of 1 NT, you had a chance to reach 4 if partner shows any sign of live- with a free bid or a jump.
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Roland


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#16 User is offline   Fluffy 

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Posted 2012-October-10, 06:45

1 with KQ10xx is obvious at any vulnerability, you need a spade lead.

Bidding 2 first round doesn't get you any close to game

Doubling 1NT is the right thing to do, better to double now because 2 is coming back 80% or more.
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