3♦ is what?
Standard Lebensohl
#1
Posted 2012-April-27, 11:59
3♦ is what?
-- Bertrand Russell
#3
Posted 2012-April-27, 14:39
I also know someone who plays any bid higher than 3♣ as saying "I would have bid on over any lower bid, but if this is your suit, that's high enough". In that context, it is not natural (could be short) and is also not forcing.
I think either way is playable. But I don't like natural non forcing. If I had that hand I would not have doubled initially.
#4
Posted 2012-April-27, 15:04
Your other agreements will determine whether it could be a strong flexible hand, strong with just diamonds, or maybe ELC.
#5
Posted 2012-April-29, 21:29
Bidding 3♣ says you are happy stopping in 3♣ if responder has 0-7 HCP and four clubs. Therefore not bidding 3♣ says you would like to go higher, and is at least invitational opposite 0-7 HCP. Responder should consider bidding game or at least something encouraging if they hold 6-7 or a nice 5 HCP. 0-4 HCP can pass if they have something of a fit with doubler's natural suit. Doubler would have done something else if he can make game almost on his own (bid game as his first bid, made a Leaping/Non-Leaping Michaels as his first bid, bid 3NT as his first bid or rebid 3NT after your Lebensohl, or cue-bid the opponent's suit as his first bid or as his rebid after your Lebensohl).
#6
Posted 2012-April-30, 01:02
-- Bertrand Russell
#7
Posted 2012-April-30, 01:24
#9
Posted 2012-April-30, 02:28
#10
Posted 2012-April-30, 07:10
#11
Posted 2012-April-30, 08:15
nigel_k, on 2012-April-27, 15:04, said:
gnasher, on 2012-April-30, 01:24, said:
Four hearts and longer diamonds seems good. That sounds more like ELC than "flexible" to me, but that doesn't really matter. What matters is the "bit extra in high cards" part. A bit more than the expected minimum for a balancing double of 2♠? That isn't much, so I am interested in what a bit extra should mean before I discuss this situation with my partner.
Regarding "Standard Lebensohl", Partner could have up to a decent balanced 14 count and pass 2S in direct position; so, our 2NT call after the balancing double could be stronger than "Standard" ---up to a flat ten...with 3-level pulls suggesting game while not hanging balancer for keeping the auction alive with a dog.
#12
Posted 2012-April-30, 11:04
aguahombre, on 2012-April-30, 08:15, said:
I think that "ELC" implies that it doesn't promise any extra values but does promise four hearts. The word "flexible" on its own is less precise about the shape, and doesn't say anything about the high-card strength.
The words "a bit extra" were intentionally vague, but I think I'd need a 13-count or so in the balancing seat.
#13
Posted 2012-April-30, 11:32
gnasher, on 2012-April-30, 11:04, said:
The words "a bit extra" were intentionally vague, but I think I'd need a 13-count or so in the balancing seat.
Sounds good. And what were we going to do with 2-4-6-1 or 2-4-5-2 and NOT that little bit extra? This is not a debate; these are just questions.
#14
Posted 2012-May-02, 03:52
aguahombre, on 2012-April-30, 11:32, said:
As I play "forcing, not natural, not game forcing" I would still bid 3♦ over 3♣. If partner jumps to game with a 10 count then it may not be a disaster, and for once all the cards could be on the right side.
I don't think there are enough bids available to show all distributions and all ranges of strengths to still stop at the 3 level