Partner opens 1NT, 15-17. You can transfer to clubs with 2S and bid minorwood for clubs or you can bid 4S (Gerber). If you elect to bid 6NT, what percentage of the time would you expect this to make, double dummy, with both the defenders and declarer looking through the back of the cards?
More Strong NT judgement
#1
Posted 2019-March-14, 05:53
Partner opens 1NT, 15-17. You can transfer to clubs with 2S and bid minorwood for clubs or you can bid 4S (Gerber). If you elect to bid 6NT, what percentage of the time would you expect this to make, double dummy, with both the defenders and declarer looking through the back of the cards?
#2
Posted 2019-March-14, 06:44
#3
Posted 2019-March-14, 06:50
etha, on 2019-March-14, 06:44, said:
If it does show a singleton, they may double to show the ace and that may backfire. Yes transfer and jump would be self-splinter.
#4
Posted 2019-March-14, 06:52
lamford, on 2019-March-14, 05:53, said:
If you elect to bid 6NT, what percentage of the time would you expect this to make, double dummy, with both the defenders and declarer looking through the back of the cards?
If I elected to bid a direct 6N, I am doing so precisely because I don't want the opponents to defending in an informed manner.
As such, the question seems rather strange...
#5
Posted 2019-March-14, 07:25
If 1N-2♣-2♥-3♣ is forcing I might even go that route to try to find out if partner has 5.
#6
Posted 2019-March-14, 08:08
#7
Posted 2019-March-14, 08:22
Frequency :
0 0
1 0
2 0
3 0
4 0
5 0
6 2
7 1
8 1
9 0
10 3
11 14
12 56
13 23
Generated 4997 hands
Produced 100 hands
Initial random seed 1552573274
Time needed 0.917 sec
#8
Posted 2019-March-14, 08:24
Rainer Herrmann
#9
Posted 2019-March-14, 09:20
Likely this hand will make anywhere 10 to 13 tricks, so some sorting out needs to occur. Opener with 15 leaves enough room for the opponents to hold 2 As and a Q, or, an A and 2 Ks. Even holding 17 the opponents could hold an A and K. Nonetheless, chances for slam seem pretty good. And, as Cy points out, grand could even be there opposite the right minimum.
So I want to force showing ♣ and make a slam try by cueing ♥ if partner doesn't have ♥ length. The concern is the 2 suits without any controls in this hand.
The only time I might consider leaping to slam is late in an Open Pairs event where I was sure I needed some tops to place.
#10
Posted 2019-March-14, 11:12
rmnka447, on 2019-March-14, 09:20, said:
Likely this hand will make anywhere 10 to 13 tricks, so some sorting out needs to occur. Opener with 15 leaves enough room for the opponents to hold 2 As and a Q, or, an A and 2 Ks. Even holding 17 the opponents could hold an A and K. Nonetheless, chances for slam seem pretty good. And, as Cy points out, grand could even be there opposite the right minimum.
So I want to force showing ♣ and make a slam try by cueing ♥ if partner doesn't have ♥ length. The concern is the 2 suits without any controls in this hand.
The only time I might consider leaping to slam is late in an Open Pairs event where I was sure I needed some tops to place.
What information will you find out to bid a grand with confidence? How likely are 13 tricks anyway?
What information will you get which will enable you to avoid a small slam except when 2 aces could be missing?
We could of course be missing the first 2 tricks in spades or diamonds, but this is hard to find out and opponents have been known not to find the right opening lead when that was the case.
It is true that opponents could have 2 aces, but it is unlikely given the HCP distribution you know already and if opener has 2 aces slam is odds on.
Meanwhile when opener has 2 aces any slow auction will give the opponents a better chance to find the right opening lead should a small slam not be cold.
Sometimes simple is best.
I see no merit whatsoever going slow here.
Rainer Herrmann
#11
Posted 2019-March-14, 11:31
rhm, on 2019-March-14, 11:12, said:
What information will you get which will enable you to avoid a small slam except when 2 aces could be missing?
We could of course be missing the first 2 tricks in spades or diamonds, but this is hard to find out and opponents have been known not to find the right opening lead when that was the case.
It is true that opponents could have 2 aces, but it is unlikely given the HCP distribution you know already and if opener has 2 aces slam is odds on.
Meanwhile when opener has 2 aces any slow auction will give the opponents a better chance to find the right opening lead should a small slam not be cold.
Sometimes simple is best.
I see no merit whatsoever going slow here.
Rainer Herrmann
Grand (in clubs) is less unlikely than you think, partner needs the missing aces and either ♦AKJx/AKxxx or ♥QJxxx (and I'll take the odds on Qxxxxx) to be good.
If I was going to just punt or ask aces and punt, I would punt 6♣ at teams unless a double indicated I should put partner in the hot seat in 6N. Obviously this can be wrong (AQxx, Qxx, KJx, Axx), but can also be right (AKx, xxxxx, Axx, Ax)
#14
Posted 2019-March-14, 21:00
#15
Posted 2019-March-14, 21:46
/** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** ***
tricks.ds.
Trick expectation at double-dummy.
Dealer by Hans van Staveren & Henk Uijterwaal
*** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** *** **/
predeal east S76, HAKT, DQT, CKQJT94
# 1N opener
ntHCP = 16
wHCP = hcp (west)
w1N =
(shape (west, any 4333 + any 4432) and
ntHCP - 2 < wHCP and wHCP < ntHCP + 2) or
(shape (west, any 5332 + any 5422 + any 6322
- 5422 - 4522 - 6xxx - x6xx) and
ntHCP - 3 < wHCP and wHCP < ntHCP + 1)
# Tricks test.
produce 100
condition w1N
action
frequency "Notrump tricks, West" (tricks( west, notrump), 10,13),
frequency "Club tricks, West" (tricks( west, clubs), 10,13),
Frequency Notrump tricks, West:
Low 5
10 6
11 27
12 41
13 21
Frequency Club tricks, West:
Low 1
10 2
11 32
12 42
13 23
Generated 3213 hands
Produced 100 hands
Initial random seed 1552620969
Time needed 1.797 sec
#16
Posted 2019-March-15, 06:29
etha, on 2019-March-14, 08:08, said:
I got similar:
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
3 5 2 2 15 32 41
where the top line is tricks, and the bottom line is percentage. 1000 trials. I used Bridge Analyser, which is certainly simpler than the one Nigel used which I found hard to follow.
I bid 6NT and partner had AQJx QJ AJxx xxx and he guessed to take the diamond finesse which worked rather than the spade finesse which didn't. He thought that the opening leader was more likely to lead a major on an uninformed auction. I jested "I did not know we had switched to a weak NT, pard?". He disagreed, but his K-R of 13.65 was the silver bullet. Mine was a massive 17.40, so an obvious 6NT, but he claimed the credit for guessing which finesse to take!
And FWIW I disagree with using Gerber, or other snail-like approaches, as you might well want to risk being in 6NT off two aces, as there is only a 25% chance of the leader having both.
"There was a break-in at the Libyan Embassy despite the presence of an uninformed police officer standing outside" - The Grauniad, 1984
#17
Posted 2019-March-15, 06:41
lamford, on 2019-March-15, 06:29, said:
And FWIW I disagree with using Gerber, or other snail-like approaches, as you might well want to risk being in 6NT off two aces, as there is only a 25% chance of the leader having both.
If you're in 6N off 2 aces, 2/3 of the time one of them is A♣ and you won't have 12 tricks without the clubs so they'll get a second go in fact it's difficult to think there is any chance of 12 tricks without opps having a second chance to get it right too often. OL's partner having 2 aces isn't going to work well unless partner habitually opens 1N with 6 hearts and he leads the wrong suit.
#18
Posted 2019-March-15, 12:44
Cyberyeti, on 2019-March-15, 06:41, said:
Of course, most of the time you are off one ace, and going slowly gives them the chance to double something. If you knew you are off two aces, you would of course not bid slam, that I agree. The scenario where they let it through off two aces is just an extra bonus. If partner has a 15 count, the opponents have ten. They are only about 20% to have two aces in a combined ten-count.
We are weighing up whether to find out about two aces missing. Here 4S was Gerber, and LHO doubling with ♠KQ, or just one of those cards, is a bigger danger.
#19
Posted 2019-March-15, 16:15
lamford, on 2019-March-15, 12:44, said:
We are weighing up whether to find out about two aces missing. Here 4S was Gerber, and LHO doubling with ♠KQ, or just one of those cards, is a bigger danger.
LHO doubling with ♠K is exactly what partner wants to hear if he has AQ, and you also have the option of bidding 6♣ so the holder of the spade honour(s) is on lead.
#20
Posted 2019-March-15, 16:51
Cheers,
Mike
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
I rank
1, 4♣ = ART (Gerber)
2. 6N = NAT (Punt).
3. 2♠ = TFR. 6♣ is sometimes better but scores less.