Agressive bidding sometimes pays?
#1
Posted 2018-May-04, 04:53
#3
Posted 2018-May-04, 05:06
#4
Posted 2018-May-04, 05:12
The funniest examples of this I have come from the rather unusual weak 2s my partner and I play (which in 1st and 3rd can be a 0 count and a 4 card suit)
After we agreed to play these, the first one I picked up was something like Jxxx, xxx, xx, Jxxx so I opened 2♠, next hand bids 3♦ and partner makes a penalty double. Turns out he had a 2N opener with ♦AQ108 and this was 1400.
The second one was part of a minor national final, 48 board match that was settled by 2 boards where the same side played in spades at both tables. One the spades were 60/43 between the 2 sides and opps dialed 800 at both tables. The other I opened 2♠ with Jxxxx and pretty much out -P-P giving 4th seat an unenviable decision with a 13 count and ♠AQ10xxx. He passed, collected 250, team mates took the same 10 tricks in 4♠ for 620.
#5
Posted 2018-May-04, 05:20
Like anything in bridge there's a time and a place and the good players can make that judgement. Must say the stronger pairs I see who post 60% week in week out are not characterised by aggressive bidding - they're dour and measured in their bidding if anything. It seems like never doing anything stupid is worth more than the occasional piece of sticking your neck out brilliance.
#6
Posted 2018-May-04, 05:49
#7
Posted 2018-May-04, 06:40
FelicityR, on 2018-May-04, 05:49, said:
It can, but it has the same perception problem, in the eyes of the people who bid conservatively, they remember when it didn't work to be aggressive, but don't notice the missed opportunities to get into an auction or get the right lead.
The other thing is to realise where/how it works. Our weak 2s tend to pick up not mainly when partner raises and we compete, but when opponents basically have one bid to enter the auction and end up in the wrong spot.
#9
Posted 2018-May-04, 14:27
oldem, on 2018-May-04, 04:53, said:
Anecdote is the singular of data
#11
Posted 2018-May-04, 15:43
People have figured out to be aggressive over 1C strong openings.
Not everyone has figured that artificial strong 2C bids are vulnerable. You just have to be a little more cautious.
After artificial 1C or 2C it is often hard to know to stop and double opps or bid your contract. Often you only get one chance.
#12
Posted 2018-May-04, 16:53
If I raised cyberyetis 4-card possible 0 pt weak 2's aggressively how would I do?
I played with a Marty Bergen wannabe back in the day, notorious for his weak 2's and made him promise to have a 6-card suit, ONLY in 2nd chair and he could still have his zero count.
A few hands in it went p - 2♥ (by him) - p - p - dbl float. They drew trumps in 5 rounds, knocked out my side ace and ran that suit when they got in with the last trump.
Me: You PROMISED to have a 6-card suit in 2nd chair!
Him: (hurt look) I DID! Clubs.
That partnership lasted 1 session
What is baby oil made of?
#13
Posted 2018-May-04, 16:56
oldem, on 2018-May-04, 04:53, said:
Sorry for the mistake of not posting the board diagram.
#14
Posted 2018-May-04, 17:32
oldem, on 2018-May-04, 16:56, said:
Is there a point to posting boards that score well because you're playing against weak opposition?
3!H doubles should be down 3 for -500.
Still a good board for you, but move the deuce of clubs to diamonds, and your top is now a clear bottom...
#16
Posted 2018-May-04, 22:15
FelicityR, on 2018-May-04, 21:33, said:
Double AND 3♥ by south (either and both) are much worse.
Get thee to gamblers anonymous tout suite. Does south play for money?
What is baby oil made of?
#17
Posted 2018-May-05, 01:18
The take out double may not be to everyone's liking.However his 3H bid is the worst bid
#19
Posted 2018-May-05, 01:56
FelicityR, on 2018-May-04, 21:33, said:
The aggressiveness was meant to belong to South for his "double". He knew that East's response of 1NT showed limited strength; he expected his side could have had up to 17~18 HCPs; and that his holding of ♠KJ3 behind the ♠ bidder could be valuable. He could have bidden 2♥ himself but this was too misleading. Therefore, he just "doubled" and waited for the best.
#20
Posted 2018-May-05, 02:15
oldem, on 2018-May-05, 01:56, said:
Well done to South for his courageous "double" He got away with it THIS time(!) I've found that there are players on here
who often confuse bridge with poker. They just can't resist playing with fire
- 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