This was MPs and both sides vul. What do you do with your 9 card H suit?
How high do you bid? with a bad 9 card suit
#1
Posted 2017-March-30, 11:16
This was MPs and both sides vul. What do you do with your 9 card H suit?
#2
Posted 2017-March-30, 13:38
#4
Posted 2017-March-30, 15:02
In 2nd seat, one opponent has already shown less than an opener, so the probability that the opponents have game or more has decreased. Normally, then, it only makes sense to have fairly solid preempts. This is especially true, when vulnerable, where down 1 doubled is a worse result than any part score their way.
Here, you've got 2 HCP and RHO has passed. Give RHO a good pass hand, say, something like 10 HCP and that leaves about 28 HCP to be split between LHO and partner. Evenly split that leaves each hand with about 14 HCP. Partner's points are just a tad more valuable for being behind LHO. So, chances are that the opponents are a little short of game unless there's a less likely big imbalance of how the points are distributed between the remaining hands. So, the possibility of a doubled set versus a part score are there.
#5
Posted 2017-March-31, 00:14
Conservative style, open 3H (no worse than -500 doubled, against their 600+ game).
Aggressive style (assume pd can help with one trick somewhere), open 4H.
#6
Posted 2017-March-31, 04:32
I fully agree with rmnka447 and the argument that has been made therein.
#8
Posted 2017-March-31, 07:10
#9
Posted 2017-March-31, 07:13
rmnka447, on 2017-March-30, 15:02, said:
In 2nd seat, one opponent has already shown less than an opener, so the probability that the opponents have game or more has decreased. Normally, then, it only makes sense to have fairly solid preempts. This is especially true, when vulnerable, where down 1 doubled is a worse result than any part score their way.
Here, you've got 2 HCP and RHO has passed. Give RHO a good pass hand, say, something like 10 HCP and that leaves about 28 HCP to be split between LHO and partner. Evenly split that leaves each hand with about 14 HCP. Partner's points are just a tad more valuable for being behind LHO. So, chances are that the opponents are a little short of game unless there's a less likely big imbalance of how the points are distributed between the remaining hands. So, the possibility of a doubled set versus a part score are there.
Unfortunately partner had Axxxx, AK, AKx, Jxx and went down in 1♠ with 6♥ cold, opps had 10/9 and 4th seat had too many spades to want to protect.
It is not danger free to pass. Not sure what I'd do at the table, probably 2♥ which for us can be a near bust, and if partner inquires I'll bid 4♥ showing something bad and distributional, but more difficult if you play more normal weak 2s.
#10
Posted 2017-March-31, 08:41
This is MP's, and a bad guess on one board will not throw a match. I'm not sure that I would chance bidding on this mess if the game were IMP's because partner could have enough stuff sitting behind North to defeat a high level contract, and still be of no use to you.
Also, if you pass initially, a hand with a very long, weak suit and zero defense is very difficult to show. If you pass, then bid and partner makes a high level penalty double, you will be (almost) 100% obligated to pull it. Further, you have no support for any suit partner might have, and your hand is valueless on offense except in ♥. On defense the hand doesn't even offer a first round ruff.
I vote 4♥.
#11
Posted 2017-March-31, 08:41
#13
Posted 2017-March-31, 11:02
GrahamJson, on 2017-March-31, 07:10, said:
I always leave my house with an open umbrella over my head in case something falls from the sky and the umbrella will save me. So far, this has worked well.
Of course, with your example hand, some people might check for keycards and avoid a slam, but I'm sure that would be overly cautious.
#14
Posted 2017-March-31, 11:05
#15
Posted 2017-March-31, 11:58
johnu, on 2017-March-31, 11:02, said:
Of course, with your example hand, some people might check for keycards and avoid a slam, but I'm sure that would be overly cautious.
Ok, I accept that mine was an extreme example but it was meant to illustrate a principle. If you open 4H partner will never imagine that you are lacking any honour. This could turn out badly in a number of ways, such as partner doubling oppo or competing too high.
#16
Posted 2017-March-31, 12:23
#17
Posted 2017-March-31, 14:18
silvr bull, on 2017-March-30, 11:16, said:
This was MPs and both sides vul. What do you do with your 9 card H suit?
Horrid hand....even with the 9 carder. I pass quickly
- 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
#18
Posted 2017-March-31, 14:18
silvr bull, on 2017-March-30, 11:16, said:
This was MPs and both sides vul. What do you do with your 9 card H suit?
- 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
#19
Posted 2017-March-31, 14:37
Oh. And if you were taught that 4H shows 8 tricks at equal vulnerability, then it's about time to drop out of the class and start forgetting what you were taught.
This hand makes 7 tricks in hearts, and 0 elsewhere. End of story.
#20
Posted 2017-March-31, 14:56
GrahamJson, on 2017-March-31, 11:58, said:
Yes, some partners would play me for a heart trick and 1 or 2 tricks on the side after I open with a preempt. And a probable 7+ playing tricks is hugely overstating the playing strength since some partners would expect 9 or 10 tricks in hand to open 4♥. I guess I'm lucky I don't play with those partners.