5xx5 any debate?
#21
Posted 2012-December-14, 03:42
2 really good suits but not a great hand, open 1♣, rebid a NF 2♠ over 1red.
A king better than the hand here (our 1♠ rebid is all but forcing and we respond fairly light) 1♣-1red-1♠-any-2♠
#22
Posted 2012-December-14, 03:48
jillybean, on 2012-December-11, 14:42, said:
Here's the hand that sparked the debate (new partner)
<snip>
Hi,
why?
North sees a 9 card fit, 2S did not promise 5, you would bid similr with 54 in the blacks.
So playing 4Hx with a known 9 card fit in spades, a 55 shape and no trump tricks, is ...
You can endlessly debate what to open, but the given hand is no hand to spark this discussion,
starting the discussion is just throwing a distraction bomb to avoid discussing the real issue on
the hand.
With kind regards
Marlowe
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#23
Posted 2012-December-14, 04:24
George Carlin
#24
Posted 2012-December-14, 11:35
Around here, I hear it Alerted usually as "you know, that guy double?" "Tell me what it means, please, not whose name it is" "Uhhh..."
I was playing in Toronto NABC, 2001, against this lovely lady when a gentleman of clearly Latino extraction sits down. "Hi, George" said the lady's partner. And then the light went on...
#25
Posted 2012-December-14, 14:03
BillPatch, on 2012-December-13, 21:51, said:
The double was invented by Jorge (George) Rosenkranz.
That would be Rosencrantz and Guildenstern. They were minor characters in Shakespeare's Hamlet who were killed after delivering a letter to the King of England which they thought was from King Claudius (Hamlet's uncle). However, Hamlet had altered the letter changing the instructions to the King of England to have Rosencrantz and Guildenstern killed.
And, as mycroft pointed out, they were the title characters in Tom Stoppard's play Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead which is a quote of a line at the very end of Hamlet.
Stoppard's Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead is often compared to Beckett's Waiting for Godot.
For fans of the early episodes of Saturday Night Live (back when it was still called Saturday Night), the line "Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are dead" in Hamlet is very similar to the line at the end of the wrestling match between the Killer Bees and the Wasps "Yes! They've done it! They've dropped the cow!" Totally irrelevant but somehow it brings a fitting end to the action.
#26
Posted 2012-December-14, 15:22
#27
Posted 2013-February-08, 07:24
For myself, when I play Acol I still open 1♣ sometimes, typically with hands where I am willing to introduce spades even if the bidding comes back at a high level. Playing another system I think I would be less inclined to open 1♣. So I do think that the "this is obvious" answers perhaps stem in some part from not considering alternative systems. I would definitely say that there is a clear difference between British and American thinking here, even when the British players do seem to have made a definite move in the American direction on this issue. That coincides with a move towards 5 card majors and it is quite possible that these two things are directly linked.
#28
Posted 2013-February-08, 14:39
Zelandakh, on 2013-February-08, 07:24, said:
Where have you seen this? It is not the done thing in London, but as bluejak likes to remind me, London is not all of England.
#29
Posted 2013-February-08, 14:57
AKxxx
x
Kx
J109xx
is a 1♠ opener - you are basically giving up on the anemic ♣ suit.
AK1087
x
xx
KJ109x
is a 1♣ opener. You don't mind a ♣ lead. Even vul you are safe to rebid ♠ up to the two level even opposite passing partner.
AKQxx
x
Ax
KJ10xx
is a 1♠ opener since with 17HCP you can rebid 3♣ as a high reverse.
#30
Posted 2013-February-08, 15:12
Vampyr, on 2013-February-08, 14:39, said:
I'm not sure I agree with "majority", but it's certainly not uncommon. While I wouldn't expect to see it at the YC, there are a lot of clubs with generally low-standard play in London as well, I'd be surprised if you frequented them but I've been surprised before!
#31
Posted 2013-February-11, 03:10
Vampyr, on 2013-February-08, 14:39, said:
I play regularly in the Acol Club on BBO. The standard there is distinctly lower than the major London clubs. Most play a rather traditional form of Acol.