At my table the bidding was 1c. 2s. 2nt. 3d. 3nt. pass
how to bid
#2
Posted 2017-December-30, 01:48
A simple 1♠ response lets you investigate other contracts.
#3
Posted 2017-December-30, 02:55
johnu, on 2017-December-30, 01:48, said:
A simple 1♠ response lets you investigate other contracts.
This!
"It's only when a mosquito lands on your testicles that you realize there is always a way to solve problems without using violence!"
"Well to be perfectly honest, in my humble opinion, of course without offending anyone who thinks differently from my point of view, but also by looking into this matter in a different perspective and without being condemning of one's view's and by trying to make it objectified, and by considering each and every one's valid opinion, I honestly believe that I completely forgot what I was going to say."
#4
Posted 2017-December-30, 03:44
#5
Posted 2017-December-30, 08:11
1♣-1♠
1N-2♣(checkback)
2♥-4♣(voidwood, 3♣ would be forcing)
4♥(1)-4N(I have 2 of ♠AKQ, do you have the other)
6♣(yes and ♣A)-6♦(I don't quite have enough to bid grand, any help in diamonds, I have 2 of AKQ)
7♥
#6
Posted 2017-December-30, 10:40
for such a bid. The jump shift takes up a LOT of room and so the message should be quite strong. Do not waste space jumping around when the partnership has no clue what strain is the best much less how high.
Back to the bidding after 2s I would bid 3h with the south hand rather than 2n with that speculative dia holding. This bid does not promise radical distribution merely takes time to point out a potential flaw in the argument for playing NT. With more radical distribution I would easily choose 3c over 2h.
#7
Posted 2017-December-30, 12:07
johnu, on 2017-December-30, 01:48, said:
A simple 1♠ response lets you investigate other contracts.
it is considered bad to js on 2-suiter never mind this 3-suiter with a void in partner's suit.
So even if better still would be wrong to js.
#8
Posted 2017-December-30, 18:23
#10
Posted 2017-December-31, 06:32
Difficult after a 1♠response,almost impossible after a 2♠ reply.
- Dr Tarrasch(1862-1934)German Chess Grandmaster
Bridge is a game where you have two opponents...and often three(!)
"Any palooka can take tricks with Aces and Kings; the true expert shows his prowess
by how he handles the two's and three's" - Mollo's Hideous Hog
#11
Posted 2017-December-31, 09:40
#12
Posted 2017-December-31, 10:28
1N-2D (x,y,z)
2N-3H
4H-4S
5C-5D
5S-6D
6H-p
#14
Posted 2017-December-31, 16:24
pescetom, on 2017-December-31, 11:47, said:
What would be wrong with a natural 2H reply instead of 2NT?
I think 2H is OK - I considered it - but the hand is so perfectly NT-ish with cards in every suit, that 2N seems to me a better call.
#15
Posted 2017-December-31, 20:49
Winstonm, on 2017-December-31, 16:24, said:
This is insane. 2H is the systemic call. It allows you to agree hearts at the 3 level, forcing, allowing cue bidding room, which is hugely useful. If you bid 2nt, responder is supposed to proceed under the assumption that you DON'T have 4 hearts, or 3 spades, and will look for diamond fit not heart fit. Future heart bids should be interpreted as cues, not length.
You already made a call that described your hand as NT-ish: 1nt!!
#16
Posted 2017-December-31, 20:57
Stephen Tu, on 2017-December-31, 20:49, said:
You already made a call that described your hand as NT-ish: 1nt!!
Don't hold back. Tell us what you really think.
As for me, I like to differentiate in this auction between Kx, Axxx, xxx, AQxx - which would be 2H, and Kx, Axxx, Qxx A10xx.
Not only are we trying to bid slams but also trying to find the right game when partner holds: AQJxx, Kxx, xx, KQx.
#17
Posted 2017-December-31, 22:24
Winstonm, on 2017-December-31, 20:57, said:
As for me, I like to differentiate in this auction between Kx, Axxx, xxx, AQxx - which would be 2H, and Kx, Axxx, Qxx A10xx.
Not only are we trying to bid slams but also trying to find the right game when partner holds: AQJxx, Kxx, xx, KQx.
I don't see how bidding 2nt helps you in this endeavor. 2nt robs you of significant bidding space. If you bid 2H, responder can bid 2s or 2nt, then subsequently bid suits as stoppers implying worry about diamonds, or bid 3d showing like half a stopper. Opener might also decline to bid 2nt over 2s holding just xxx in diamonds. If you bid 2nt, responder has fewer choices to work with, and can't:
- distinguish between 5 spades/6 spades, no longer having choice of 2s / 3s
- have 3h show a FIFTH heart, 5-5 shape which people might assume on your auction without prior discussion.
- bid 3h showing worry about diamonds when only holding a heart fragment, since you might raise
- bid 3c with just club honors, not length in clubs since normally this shows 4, 5+ clubs and looking for 4s/5c/6c.
#18
Posted 2017-December-31, 23:25
#19
Posted 2018-January-01, 04:11
Even 7S make.
#20
Posted 2018-January-01, 07:41
Stephen Tu, on 2017-December-31, 22:24, said:
- distinguish between 5 spades/6 spades, no longer having choice of 2s / 3s
- have 3h show a FIFTH heart, 5-5 shape which people might assume on your auction without prior discussion.
- bid 3h showing worry about diamonds when only holding a heart fragment, since you might raise
- bid 3c with just club honors, not length in clubs since normally this shows 4, 5+ clubs and looking for 4s/5c/6c.
That's certainly possible. The issue to me, though, is that partner's bid asks for 3-card support or, lacking that, a further clarification of your hand. The only decision to make is in how to describe the hand. This really is an issue of shape versus holdings - shape, as you use it, may be better - but it is not the only method.