1m - (1H) - X what is "standard"
#1
Posted 2016-February-16, 18:56
1♣/1♦ - (1♥) - X
Is it
a) takeout, nearly always exactly four spades
b) takeout, denying four spades, since 1♠ would show 4+
c) shows 4+ spades (because people play some sort of inversion where 1♠ is takeout without four spades)
Or something else
#2
Posted 2016-February-17, 00:28
that dbl shows no spades (usually no heart stoppers too) and 1♠ shows 4+ spades. This is b).
I play that dbl shows 4+ spades and 1♠ is transfer to NT, without 4 spades. Such transfers in defence are really useful, because NT is played from better hand. This is c).
Before I use to play transfers, I had bidded dbl as exactly 4 spades and 1♠ as 5+. It makes finding a spade suit 5-3 or 6-2 easier. This is a).
I'm from Poland and people play all this styles here and b) is the most popular.
#3
Posted 2016-February-17, 00:35
#4
Posted 2016-February-17, 00:49
Experts (everywhere) are as far as I know switching to c') a lot, in which X shows 4-5 spades, 1S denies spades (so a minor-oriented hand that doesn't want to bid 1NT), and 2H/2S show 6+ spades (2H inv+ or thereabouts, 2S weakish). This has the advantage over 1S=4+ spades and X=denies spades that opener can potentially rebid 1S showing exactly 3 spades so you can stop there with a 4-3 fit. It also has the advantage over X=4+ spades, 1S=denies spades that opener knows a bit more about responder's hand.
George Carlin
#5
Posted 2016-February-17, 00:59
1c (1h) ??
AKx xxx Kxxx xxx
Here, X seems like the best of a bunch of bad choices.
Cheers,
mike
#6
Posted 2016-February-17, 02:52
shevek, on 2016-February-16, 18:56, said:
1♣/1♦ - (1♥) - X
Is it
a) takeout, nearly always exactly four spades
b) takeout, denying four spades, since 1♠ would show 4+
c) shows 4+ spades (because people play some sort of inversion where 1♠ is takeout without four spades)
Or something else
As partner has already bid,the double is for penalties.
- 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
#7
Posted 2016-February-17, 03:03
-- Bertrand Russell
#8
Posted 2016-February-17, 03:28
George Carlin
#9
Posted 2016-February-17, 03:31
#11
Posted 2016-February-17, 06:53
helene_t, on 2016-February-17, 00:35, said:
I am not sure whether this is poor agreement. It is certainly an easy agreement though not very sexy.
But I am sure the rest of your system and your bidding philosophy has an impact.
For example
How are your minor suit openings structured?
Does responders Pass deny values? (Not the way I play. I often refrain from bidding 1NT after RHO overcalled when that might wrong-side notrumps.)
Do you play negative free bids?
etc.
The critical path is if advancer will next raise or jump-raise hearts.
I find the difference between 4 and 5 spades in responder's hand crucial for opener to compete in spades effectively and it is in spades where the money is.
With negative free bids holding less than 4 spades it is rare you can not move over 1♥.
When it happens you are almost always balanced not short in hearts.
Rainer Herrmann
#12
Posted 2016-February-17, 07:16
#13
Posted 2016-February-17, 08:05
PhilG007, on 2016-February-17, 02:52, said:
gwnn, on 2016-February-17, 03:28, said:
You want to know something? I was first playing bridge when most of you guys on here (or your parents) were still in nappies, back in the 1960s.
I learnt a lot of my bridge back then from an excellent little handbook by Terence Reese, no less (and you're surely not about to dismiss him as a dumbass player or something....?)
In the book, he quite explicitly states "If partner has already made a bid, a double is for penalties with the expectation of defeating the contract".
Of course, I know full well that I can't play by that book any longer. Bridge has changed beyond recognition in the 50 years since, and I've had to learn my way into BBO systems the hard way, with many slip-ups on the way. I still don't understand much of plenty of other players' convention cards, even in the Acol Club. But I get by, now. And yes, I know that double of an opponents overcall at the one level no longer means penalties. After all, we have negative doubles now (which I do understand....)
So I'm wondering where we get by insulting other contributors to this forum, possibly for no other reason than that they were, like me, playing bridge a long time ago. Oh well, if someone else can be a p****, so can I.
#14
Posted 2016-February-17, 08:31
George Carlin
#15
Posted 2016-February-17, 08:38
I still don't see what relevance your earlier post has, though.
#16
Posted 2016-February-17, 09:16
1 ♠, then guarantees 5+ ♠ here. Opener holding 3 or 4 ♠ has more clarity about whether to raise ♠ directly or not. Over 1 ♠, there's no problem raising with 3 ♠. Over a double opener will normally only raise with 4 unless holding some hand where raising with 3 and possibly playing a 4-3 fit seems like the right thing to do.
#17
Posted 2016-February-17, 09:32
oryctolagi, on 2016-February-17, 08:38, said:
He didn't continue to give the same advice in later years, so are you saying that Reese said that Reese had it totally wrong?
London UK
#18
Posted 2016-February-17, 09:32
oryctolagi, on 2016-February-17, 08:38, said:
No, he didn't say that.
Reese was absolutely correct according to standards of the day. In fact this is the only permitted meaning of a double (after partner has bid but not including a protective double, I believe) at many rubber bridge clubs.
The agreement I like from the OP is ©, though I acknowledge that knowing whether partner has 4 or 5 spades can sometimes be crucial.
(a) is not bad, but I would say "usually" instead of "nearly always". Undiscussed I would always assume (a), probably omitting the "nearly". And neither I nor my partner will be dealt problem hands.
#19
Posted 2016-February-17, 09:33
#20
Posted 2016-February-17, 09:46
oryctolagi, on 2016-February-17, 08:38, said:
I still don't see what relevance your earlier post has, though.
Maybe you can read my second post which explains my first post pretty accurately. There is a difference between supporting an outdated, inferior method and supporting an outdated, inferior method while naming everyone who disagrees with you (i.e., pretty much everyone) various names (which the poster in questions has done plenty of times in the past -- check out his posts).
In unrelated news...
https://en.wikipedia...i/Scissors_jump
Are you saying all those olympic champions from the 10s and 20s had it totally wrong?? Who are you to say so? You're entitled to that view I guess, but just because all the professional athletes abandoned the scissors jump doesn't make it superior per se.
As the philosopher Minchin said, keep an open mind but if it's too open, your brain will fall out.
edit: apparently not originally Minchin but perhaps Feynman, but the principle is still correct.
This post has been edited by gwnn: 2016-February-17, 09:49
George Carlin