The conservative combination of Pass and 3♣ cost me a tournament, although maybe partner could have risked 3NT. Alternatives, such as 3♠ over the double of unknown partner?
Tricky Takeout
#1
Posted 2019-January-17, 16:41
The conservative combination of Pass and 3♣ cost me a tournament, although maybe partner could have risked 3NT. Alternatives, such as 3♠ over the double of unknown partner?
#2
Posted 2019-January-17, 17:08
pescetom, on 2019-January-17, 16:41, said:
If I was your partner and bid 3NT, you still would have lost the tournament because I would have misguessed diamonds and gone down.
#3
Posted 2019-January-17, 17:51
Even if you play a Lebensohl 2 NT response to double of a weak 2 bid to show bust hands, a 3 ♣ response is still a serious underbid. 3 ♣ shows something more than a bust according to partnership agreement. I think it show at least a 6-7 count, otherwise you Lebensohl and pass or correct. (One good player I play with insists it shows even more.) The whole point is to avoid making the doubler guess what to do when holding a more than minimum double.
If you don't play it, 3 ♣ could be made on a zero count, so can't be right.
3 ♠, for me, remains the bid of choice to get partner to understand that game is likely opposite the double even if partner is an unknown quantity. If partner doesn't field it properly, that's his/her problem. If you bid incorrectly, then it's on partner. Partner is likely to bid 3 NT and, as johnu suggests, likely to misguess the ♦ finesse and go down. It may be small consolation, but avoids the wear and tear of recriminations.
Good bidding doesn't always get you to the right spot, just a reasonably good spot.
#4
Posted 2019-January-17, 18:12
rmnka447, on 2019-January-17, 17:51, said:
Even if you play a Lebensohl 2 NT response to double of a weak 2 bid to show bust hands, a 3 ♣ response is still a serious underbid. 3 ♣ shows something more than a bust according to partnership agreement. I think it show at least a 6-7 count, otherwise you Lebensohl and pass or correct. (One good player I play with insists it shows even more.) The whole point is to avoid making the doubler guess what to do when holding a more than minimum double.
If you don't play it, 3 ♣ could be made on a zero count, so can't be right.
3 ♠, for me, remains the bid of choice to get partner to understand that game is likely opposite the double even if partner is an unknown quantity. If partner doesn't field it properly, that's his/her problem. If you bid incorrectly, then it's on partner. Partner is likely to bid 3 NT and, as johnu suggests, likely to misguess the ♦ finesse and go down. It may be small consolation, but avoids the wear and tear of recriminations.
Good bidding doesn't always get you to the right spot, just a reasonably good spot.
3♠ tends to be staymanic particularly if you do play leb leading to a VERY tricky 4♥.
#5
Posted 2019-January-17, 18:36
#6
Posted 2019-January-17, 22:53
Surrendering to existential truth is the beginning of enlightenment.
#7
Posted 2019-January-18, 03:34
If you don't play Leb over X of weak 2, you should do so. I disagree with all of the above posters -- after a X, I think 3C is just fine provided you play Leb. That means it's 8-11 or so. Seems like what you have. 3S is a gross overbid; your partner may have something like:
Kx
AJxx
Qxxx
Axx
and now you are in deep doo-doo.
Over a 3C 8-11 bid, you have an easy 3NT call.
#8
Posted 2019-January-18, 03:50
Crane would open the North hand and there they would be at 3 NT making when the diamond queen comes down doubleton on a good guess. I would suppose 2NT in response to the double makes good sense regardless of the meaning...NO reason to beat yourself up over this one!
#9
Posted 2019-January-18, 03:55
miamijd, on 2019-January-18, 03:34, said:
I agree with this.
Also, using the same logic. if I chose to double and received a 3♣ response (playing Lebensohl), I would bid 3NT, hoping that partner's spades are robust enough to provide a second stop. Even ♠XXX in partner's hand might be enough if we hold up the first round and East does not have a side entry.
#10
Posted 2019-January-18, 04:45
smerriman, on 2019-January-17, 18:36, said:
2N-3♣-3♠ and direct 3♠ are both staymanic with/without a stop, you can play this either way round.
3N either way says I want to play 3N, I don't have 4 hearts, with/without a spade stop either way round.
#11
Posted 2019-January-18, 07:53
#13
Posted 2019-January-18, 08:52
#14
Posted 2019-January-18, 09:07
Cyberyeti, on 2019-January-18, 08:12, said:
One table did indeed go -3 in this way, but at another 5 tables S made 3NT, usually by cashing A♦ and running the T♦ (whatever their reasoning was).
At another 3 tables N played ♦ making 11 or 12 tricks.
Just 4 tables let E play spades, 3 of them being 3SEx-2.
#15
Posted 2019-January-18, 09:34
As I said, I had an unknown partner, and for the record Polish too: a fine nation of bridge players, but not exactly mainstream in terms of bidding I guessed he would take account of the lack of Lebensohl, but I honestly had no idea how he would take 3♠, which looked to me a slight overbid anyway. So 3♣ seemed the only safe option, even if a bit feeble. Interesting to note that one guy bid 3♦ in the same situation, go figure why but it did work out better.
I looked through the bidding of the other 14 tables. Seven started P P 2♠ X and five started P P 1♠, only one started P 1♦. Most of those who got to 3NT did so after the opponents went to 3♠, sometimes after 3♣, so I guess I didn't do anything terribly wrong compared to my peers.
#16
Posted 2019-January-18, 09:53
billyjef, on 2019-January-17, 22:53, said:
If you are playing Leb, as now it seems you were, then 3♣ is not an underbid.
Surrendering to existential truth is the beginning of enlightenment.
#17
Posted 2019-January-18, 09:54
eagles123, on 2019-January-18, 08:52, said:
Yeah, but E will discard 3 hearts on the clubs, so you can discount 6241, in fact it looks like he has ♥A as he hasn't let a spade go, so you'd have to believe he was not only 6-4 in the majors, but also had a 10 count and not opened 1 with that shape to play him for the Q♦.
#18
Posted 2019-January-18, 11:45
#19
Posted 2019-January-18, 14:16
pescetom, on 2019-January-17, 16:41, said:
The conservative combination of Pass and 3♣ cost me a tournament, although maybe partner could have risked 3NT. Alternatives, such as 3♠ over the double of unknown partner?
- 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
#20
Posted 2019-January-18, 15:45
pescetom, on 2019-January-18, 09:07, said:
At another 3 tables N played ♦ making 11 or 12 tricks.
Just 4 tables let E play spades, 3 of them being 3SEx-2.
I imagine that most easts opened one spade, not two. If so it’s fairly obvious to play east for the diamond queen. Against a 2S opening it’s much more of a guess.