Your bid over Michaels
#1
Posted 2013-January-29, 09:57
T732
T65
KT63
62
Double would show values and defense.
I think the main choices are...
Pass
3S
4S
Which do you pick and why?
#2
Posted 2013-January-29, 10:48
4♠ now has too many ways to lose, compared to the narrow winning target, and we can often reach that target after 3♠.
Pass was closer than 4♠, since 3♠ might drive LHO to bid at the 4 level when otherwise he was going to bid at the 3-level, and they'd miss game. And I think partner is entitled to play me for a slightly better hand than this. However, most opps will have decent agreements on how to advance a michaels cuebid and I'd prefer to disrupt that. More importantly I want to invite partner to the party and neither pass nor 4♠ do that.
Nothing's perfect on this hand: I go with what I think is the call that best combines causing problems for the opps and helping out partner.
#3
Posted 2013-January-29, 13:39
#5
Posted 2013-January-29, 15:35
On the other hand, playing a strong club system, opps will more often than not make game with the majority of strength. Partner being limited. they will have a probable 9+ card fit, maybe even double-fit. The final guess is over 4♠ not 3♠
A partner can convince me to play nearly anything, but if partner breaks agreements, then you will fairly fast reach the point, that I wont be interested in playing any longer. Stick to your agreements.
Marlowe (Uwe Gebhardt)
#6
Posted 2013-January-29, 18:10
-- Bertrand Russell
#7
Posted 2013-January-29, 23:41
I suppose it depends who the opponents are - but I think they are more likely finish in 3H making 4 if I pass, than they are to finish in 4H going down if I bid.
I at least understand considering 3S.But I can't remember the last time something good happened from bidding a 10-loser hand at the 3 level at my table.
#8
Posted 2013-January-29, 23:47
If they have 4♥, they should be bidding and making it anyway. But if p is 54/55 with a good hand,
I want to be in 3♠, or letting opps start searching at the 4 level.
#9
Posted 2013-January-30, 06:57
skaftij, on 2013-January-29, 15:35, said:
I have never played SAYC but a quick look at the booklet shows this trivially to be false:
Quote
1♠ (2♠) 3♥ = game force.
There are many other systems around that specify an immediate raise as constructive and expect you to pass first with a weak hand and support. If you had said: "Playing normal Expert methods, a clear cut 3♠" then perhaps this is right (ask an Expert) but you cannot take your chosen defence and call it SAYC. In any case, the question was specifically asked from the point of view of limited openers so SAYC is already a poor choice for comparison.
#10
Posted 2013-January-30, 07:14
mgoetze, on 2013-January-29, 18:10, said:
And your point is what? He posts a question in the Expert forum to get a consensus from experts. He gets one, so he should have chosen a different forum?
Maybe the gatekeepers of the fora should chill out a bit.
#11
Posted 2013-January-30, 07:22
aguahombre, on 2013-January-30, 07:14, said:
Maybe the gatekeepers of the fora should chill out a bit.
You have a valid point but next time you could also read the description of the subforums.
George Carlin
#12
Posted 2013-January-30, 07:30
aguahombre, on 2013-January-30, 07:14, said:
Because that's what the I/A forum is for.
-- Bertrand Russell
#13
Posted 2013-January-30, 08:51
Zelandakh, on 2013-January-30, 06:57, said:
There are many other systems around that specify an immediate raise as constructive and expect you to pass first with a weak hand and support. If you had said: "Playing normal Expert methods, a clear cut 3♠" then perhaps this is right (ask an Expert) but you cannot take your chosen defence and call it SAYC. In any case, the question was specifically asked from the point of view of limited openers so SAYC is already a poor choice for comparison.
I believe what was meant by "playing SAYC" was playing a standard expert methods in a standard system as opposed to a strong club system. So, while the 3♠ bid over Michaels may be constructive in SAYC, I would be willing to bet that virtually no expert plays that.
#14
Posted 2013-January-31, 03:59
ArtK78, on 2013-January-30, 08:51, said:
You are a genuinely positive person Art! My experience from BBO is that when a person says "SAYC" and means something completely different from SAYC, what they actually mean is "my version of SA".
#15
Posted 2013-January-31, 17:21
Zelandakh, on 2013-January-31, 03:59, said:
My version of SAYC, that is true indeed. It did not occur to me that THE SAYC defined 3 hearts as gameforce.
The point I was trying to make was that 3 spades was a better bid playing a system where 1 spade opening has a wide range in strength as opposed to a strong club system. Bidding 4 spades might be slightly better than bidding 3 spades playing a strong club system. Could not miss the opportunity to express that opinion when Justin just declared 3s period.
A partner can convince me to play nearly anything, but if partner breaks agreements, then you will fairly fast reach the point, that I wont be interested in playing any longer. Stick to your agreements.
Marlowe (Uwe Gebhardt)
#16
Posted 2013-January-31, 19:02
The accompaning SAYC booklet is very compact. The main theme for competitive bidding is "bids in competition mean the same as they would have meant without competition. A cue of an overcall creates a game force."
No, we really don't want to have those agreements. Those who also don't want to have those agreements should simply not call what they play SAYC. There is no such thing as someone's version of SAYC.
BTW: AWM is the designated expert on what is, and is not, SAYC. I keep having to look things up.