You're playing 2/1 vanilla
Your bid?
#2
Posted 2018-October-20, 14:12
#5
Posted 2018-October-20, 16:37
I rank
- Double = NEG. Like Dokoko and Nullve, I hope partner can bid 3N.
- 4♠ = NAT. Might be OK.
- 3♠ = NAT. Underbid but partner might rebid 3N.
- 4♣ = NAT But committal
- 4♥ = CUE But no room to explore.
- 3N = NAT. Macho but mad. Especially if partner turns up with ♥ Kx
#8
Posted 2018-October-21, 01:02
Cyberyeti, on 2018-October-20, 16:51, said:
That's a good point, Cyberyeti, though I'd rather X than bid 4♣ here. Yes, there's always the possibility that partner is 5143 and we play in a ♦ suit Moysian game instead of ♣s. But nobody said bridge is an easy game...
#10
Posted 2018-October-21, 05:25
Cyberyeti, on 2018-October-21, 01:42, said:
In situations where opps appear to have preempted to the limit: If we just trust them and look at the number of cards we have in their suit, we can also infer how many cards partner is likely to have in their suit. So if we do the same here, then although partner might also have doubled with 5233 or 52(42) shape on this auction, I think he's more likely to be 51(43) in view of our heart doubleton. (And of course more likely to be 5143 than 5134 in view of our xx36 shape.)
#11
Posted 2018-October-21, 08:04
nige1, on 2018-October-20, 16:37, said:
IMPs, team match, strong opps
You're playing 2/1 vanilla
I rank
- Double = NEG. Like Dokoko and Nullve, I hope partner can bid 3N.
- 4♠ = NAT. Might be OK.
- 3♠ = NAT. Underbid but partner might rebid 3N.
- 4♣ = NAT But committal
- 4♥ = CUE But no room to explore.
- 3N = NAT. Macho but mad. Especially if partner turns up with ♠ QTx
You're saying 4!C is committal but placing 4!S above it? That seems like a bit of a bizarre thought process. If I bid 4!C, I should be easily able to play in 4!S when partner doesn't have club support. If I bid 4!S, how am I going to play in a 9-card club fit rather than a 7-card spade fit?
After 3!S, are you suggesting p's 3NT rebid is an offer to play? It looks like a slam try of some sort to me.
#12
Posted 2018-October-21, 11:37
#16
Posted 2018-October-21, 18:23
I have never played thrump doubles. Theres no doubt but that they work brilliantly when they come up, but they carry a significant price since opener presumably has to give priority to bidding 3N rather than bidding our fit. Arguably this OP sequence is th3 best for thrump doubles since we give up only on a minor suit contract, whereas if partner had opened a minor, we may be unable to find a major fit, if double is thrump.
One should not haul out an artificial convention without an agreement, but I can see doubling here anyway, since we can perhaps survive whatever partner does, so long as he doesnt insist on diamonds with only 4 of them (and even then we may survive). I intend to bid 4S over 4D or 3S. Over an improbable 4C, I raise. I pass 3N.
My second choice is 4C, intending to bid 4S over 4D, and make a slam move over 4H should partner bid that, and pass 4S.
I would score any other call as zero in any bidding contest.
#17
Posted 2018-October-21, 23:25
Cyberyeti, on 2018-October-21, 16:32, said:
It's the OPENER making the double saying pick your better minor. You gonna pick diamonds?
#18
Posted 2018-October-22, 00:39
So, despite the ♣ suit, I think the right bid is Double.
If opener finds a 3 NT bid, I think there are reasonable prospects the contract will make. The ♣ suit may provide a running suit if partner happens to hold ♣ Q. If not, the ♥ J may help provide a potential 2nd stopper if opener's stopper is something like ♥ K10x.
If opener doesn't find a 3 NT bid, then opener's bid will provide some information in the quest where to play the hand. If opener bids 3 ♠, responder can bid 4 ♣ trying for 4 ♠ or 5 ♣. If opener bids 4 ♣, responder can carry on to 5 ♣. If opener bids 4 ♦, then the question is whether to play in ♦ on a potential 4-3 fit or play somewhere else. I'd be apt to try 4 ♠ over 4 ♦.
Someone asked about what opener's double meant in the auction 1 ♠ - (3 ♥) - Dbl - (4 ♥) - Dbl. Since the original negative double was already for takeout with presumably about game going values, I don't think it's for takeout. Opener can simply bid a suit if there's a preference for a minor or pass to give responder the chance to bid further or double. I'd probably take the double as showing values/cooperative versus necessarily being penalty. With 3 QTs, I'd just pass and take what looks like a sure set. +300 versus a game our way gives up at worst a part score swing, but gains if any game at the 5 level goes down.
#20
Posted 2018-October-22, 10:13
Cyberyeti, on 2018-October-22, 02:46, said:
I have no idea what you are talking about. The original point I was commenting on was what did 1s-3h-x-4h-x mean. I stated it was responsive. It is now your turn to bid. How is the opener going to skip you and bid 5d? Please try to clarify what your point is.
IMPs, team match, strong opps
You're playing 2/1 vanilla