What bids do you choose?
#1
Posted 2012-November-11, 20:10
♠T
♥K754
♦KQT94
♣AK8
1st question: In first seat, you open 1♦, partner bids 1♥, and RHO overcalls 1♠. What is your 2nd bid?
2nd question: If you bid 3♠ (which is a splinter by partnership agreement) and partner calls 4♦, what bid do you make next?
#2
Posted 2012-November-11, 23:06
#3
Posted 2012-November-11, 23:26
If I decided to bid 3♠ my first reaction is to be consistent with myself and use keycard, but in retrospect if partner has 3 keycards he cannot construct any possible hand that doesn't make slam over splinter, or at least none that lacks club control so there is no real need to go berserk again.
#4
Posted 2012-November-12, 00:12
#5
Posted 2012-November-12, 03:04
2-supposing this hand is strong enough to bid 3♠ is a right auction ,and after pd rebid 4♦ I am willing to bid 5♥ to ask pd's trump quality.
#6
Posted 2012-November-12, 06:42
Fluffy, on 2012-November-11, 23:26, said:
LOL. Maybe I should change my login name to Berserk Bull, or how about Bull in a China Shop?
![:D](http://www.bridgebase.com/forums/public/style_emoticons/default/biggrin.gif)
I see a consensus that a jump to 3♥ is the best action for the first part. Do all (most?, some?) of you play that jump as forcing? My partnership style plays the jump as invitational. For the others who bid 3♥ as invitational, here is a follow up question. Is partner supposed to bid 4♥ with a hand like xxx Jxxxx Jxx xx, or maybe like xxx Qxxx xxx Qxx? Obviously those hands will not make a great game, but I would rather be in 4♥ than a part score with either of them, and with many more hands that partner will not see any extras over his initial 1♥ bid. If the jump to 3♥ is invitational, how do we get to the close games?
#7
Posted 2012-November-12, 06:51
You don't want to be in game opposite xxx-Qxxx-xxx-Qxx since you will usually lose two trump tricks. It is true that partner will pass your 3♥ bid with more than that but then he will usually have some wasted values in spades.
#8
Posted 2012-November-12, 10:22
silvr bull, on 2012-November-12, 06:42, said:
Um, are you playing all weak openers start 1♣ so 1♦ = 16+ unlimited? If partner had this hand, I would expect an apology afterwards !
3♥ not forcing. If i wanted to force I would bid 2♠ (unspecified but strong) and then 3♥ over say 3♦.
#9
Posted 2012-November-12, 11:19
silvr bull, on 2012-November-12, 06:42, said:
Please don't troll. I have a sense you know perfectly well that 3♥ isn't forcing, and choosing some carefully crafted examples is not the way to advance your cause. I see that you have made a total of two posts, but you are clearly past Audrey Grant.
Even in your examples, your opponents have a bunch of spades, and a fair amount of HCP, so these examples are not representative.
If I bid 3♥ (which is obvious) and partner made a slam try with 4♦, RKC looks like a good next move.
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#10
Posted 2012-November-12, 13:09
a) uses much less bidding room
b) is similar strength showing.
Never tell the same lie twice. - Elim Garek on the real moral of "The boy who cried wolf"
#11
Posted 2012-November-12, 22:48
BunnyGo, on 2012-November-12, 13:09, said:
a) uses much less bidding room
b) is similar strength showing.
3♥ shows 4 card support, and more narrowly limits hand. After the 2♠ cue, not knowing fit, partner will show
stopper if he has it. Axx good for slam, KQx the dregs. If partner prefers ♦ you will know double fit, but little
else. After raise, if partner bids new suit you know it's a slam try, and immediately ask for key cards. Bidding space
saved by cuebidding wasted because of poorer limitation of your hand.
#12
Posted 2012-November-13, 07:22
Phil, on 2012-November-12, 11:19, said:
Thanks for the warm welcome to an obvious forum newby. I learned about the forum a few days ago from BBO, and I first heard about BBO from a friend two months ago.
Quote
The truth is that I have little confidence in my guesses at modern bridge practices. Other than a few duplicate sessions several years ago, I have not played any bridge for decades before I heard about BBO. It is a major challenge for me to find out what new techniques I need to learn, and what bad old practices I should discard.
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I sincerely apologize if the tone of my 2nd post upset your tender sensitivity. I hoped my first post would evolve into help with some of the subtleties of slam investigation after I forced to game in ♥. I was absolutely shocked that there was an almost unanimous agreement that my hand should only invite to game. If I held little more than ♥Jxxxx or ♥QJxx (my example was not crafted carefully enough, but thanks, Helene, for the helpful and friendly correction), and the ♣Q or a doubleton ♣, then I would pass the 1♦ opening without another thought. I expected partners 1♥ bid (instead of a pass over 1♦) to show more than those example hands that rate to have a good play for 4♥, so forcing the hand to game seemed clear to me before I posted here.
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Sorry, but it is still not obvious to me that my hand should only invite to game. It is also not obvious to me that I should give LHO an easy opportunity to bid 3♠ when I can prevent that show of support at the 3 level by forcing the hand to 4♥.
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After partner cooperated with a 4♦ bid, I did ask for aces because I thought slam would be odds on if partner held ♦A and ♥Axxxx or better. Instead, partner held ♠xxx ♥QJ9x ♦Axxx ♣QT. Everyone here will be happy to know that karma prevailed to punish my berserk overbidding with a 5-0 trump split, so 5H doubled was down 2. The full hand is in this link:
http://s1308.beta.ph...bid001.jpg.html
I will try to have a better subject for my next post in the forum. Thanks to everyone for all the replies.
#13
Posted 2012-November-13, 07:43
That said I'd probably do so by initially bidding 2♠ to see what partner does next, but I wouldn't be stopping below game.
#14
Posted 2012-November-13, 08:20
According to the advocats of the 3 ♠ or 4 ♥ bid, we better open this hand 2 ♣ because we may miss game if we don't...
![<_<](http://www.bridgebase.com/forums/public/style_emoticons/default/dry.gif)
Roland
Sanity Check: Failure (Fluffy)
More system is not the answer...
#15
Posted 2012-November-13, 08:23
ahydra
#16
Posted 2012-November-13, 10:13
silvr bull, on 2012-November-13, 07:22, said:
Sorry for the brusque reply earlier. I usually wait until someone's 10th post before I accuse them of trolling.
The play in 4♠ looks kind of interesting. I looked up the movie (not hard to do) and there was a 620 and 650 NS.
One point that hasn't been made about the splinter is that it makes it very difficult later in the bidding. Your partner has a completely normal 4♦ call over 3♠, and now it feels like you need to take over since you have the club covers - you are endplayed in the bidding to an extent. So a hand that has gone from a minimum splinter, has now become a hand that forces to the 5 level!
Hopefully your partner understands the importance of bidding games too, and can move on over 3♥. If you made me bid game, I still wouldn't splinter, and would prefer four hearts, which implies more playing strength, and its less of a slam try (which you haven't got).
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#17
Posted 2012-November-13, 10:35
silvr bull, on 2012-November-13, 07:22, said:
The truth is that I have little confidence in my guesses at modern bridge practices. Other than a few duplicate sessions several years ago, I have not played any bridge for decades before I heard about BBO. It is a major challenge for me to find out what new techniques I need to learn, and what bad old practices I should discard.
I was absolutely shocked that there was an almost unanimous agreement that my hand should only invite to game. ....so forcing the hand to game seemed clear to me before I posted here.
Sorry, but it is still not obvious to me that my hand should only invite to game. It is also not obvious to me that I should give LHO an easy opportunity to bid 3♠ when I can prevent that show of support at the 3 level by forcing the hand to 4♥.
After partner cooperated with a 4♦ bid, I did ask for aces because I thought slam would be odds on if partner held ♦A and ♥Axxxx or better.
Welcome to the forums and back to the game.
I am one of the 3♥ bidders and am not the least bit impressed by the fact that it is possible to construct hands on which partner will pass that call and game is good. That sort of 'magic card' construction can lead to terrible habits, whether you do it pessimistically or optimistically. Bridge bidding is imperfect, and it is necessary to accept that your methods, no matter how good, will not reach every good contract nor avoid every bad one.
As for preventing a show of support by splintering, that works only if you are able to remove the double card from LHO's bidding box...a move that is viewed with disapproval in most games.
And having forced to game, the notion that you must keycard over 4♦ means only that you have fooled not only your partner but also yourself into believing that you hold a powerhouse....in your case, you have fooled yourself into believing not only that you held a gf splinter but undisclosed extras, such that partner will underestimate your hand if you now bid 4♥.
Had you bid 4♥, your partner has a clear pass. Improve his hand to the point that slam is good, and he won't have a pass.
Going back to my first point, which is related to this last one, bidding is a game of communication, entailing the need to trust partner to properly evaluate his hand and to listen to how you have described yours. When you hold x Kxxx KQ10xx AKx and bid it in the same way as x AKxx KQJxx AJx, then you can expect that your partner will often go wrong. This can be by overbidding as much as the fear you have of underbidding.
While I recommend not creating magic hands during the auction, consider xxx Qxxxx Axx Kx. Opposite your actual hand, the 5 level will often be too high. Opposite the hand on which I suspect most posters would consider a splinter to be automatic, slam is virtually cold. Now, it may well be possible to splinter with both (I made these up in 5 seconds so they aren't carefully chosen) and reach the appropriate level, but I hope that you can see why it usually pays dividends to have a narrower range for splinters here than you seem to think best.
#18
Posted 2012-November-13, 10:50
#19
Posted 2012-November-13, 11:50
Fluffy, on 2012-November-13, 10:50, said:
I think that's too strong, it usually denies 4♥, but 2♠-P-3♦-P-3♥-P-3N-P-4♥ says yes I do have 4.
To MikeH the question for me is "Are there more hands where 4♥ makes and partner won't bid it over 3♥ than there are that go wrong if I do something else ?" and for me the answer is yes.
Also to the OP you should have been able to sort your problem out with a serious/frivolous 3N over 3♠, and I wouldn't even consider 3♠ on that hand without playing one of them. I don't think you need to bid higher than 4♥ if 4♦ is non serious.
#20
Posted 2012-November-13, 11:59
Cyberyeti, on 2012-November-13, 11:50, said:
To MikeH the question for me is "Are there more hands where 4♥ makes and partner won't bid it over 3♥ than there are that go wrong if I do something else ?" and for me the answer is yes.
I understand your p.o.v., tho I would quibble and suggest that you also have to factor in the cost of going wrong. Missing a vul game costs 10 imps if you play at the 3 level. Going down at the 5-level, undoubled, costs 12 imps, so you need to factor in that difference.
I suggest it also matters how you play invites. As I explained in another recent thread, my style is to invite conservatively and accept aggressively. That means that I will accept 3♥ more often than do players who use a different philosophy.
I'd expect partner to accept with most 8 counts and 4 hearts, so long as he has no wastage in spades (he should see spade values as wasted even without the splinter because of the overcall) and with weaker hands with extra shape/secondary fit. So I miss some games. Tant pis.