I took partner's heart raise as pre-emptive/shapely, and didn't see any point in raising to game. Unfortunately 11 tricks are there (thanks to a very lucky diamond layout requiring running the ten and ducking if covered, else take a double finesse to set up a third diamond for a club discard), and this was worth 36% as most people found it. It is somewhat unusual in that North has a seven loser hand, South has an eight loser hand, so nine tricks should be the limit on the basis of the losing trick count, but 11 are there (because of the diamond layout and the ♥Q drops).
Here is what she said to me about it:
"If I have an opening hand I will cue bid 2S. If holding 6-12 pts I will now count my losers and bid accordingly.
8 losers = 2H
7 losers = 3H
6 losers = game. Here I would cue bid or bid Jacoby
I held an 8 loser hand but upped my bid to 3H with 11 points and holding 4H. You can now count your losers (7) and bid 4H.
If I am competing and not vulnerable I bid to the level of the fit."
I don't think she quite has this right, as I would take a minimum raise as a nine or ten loser hand, an invitational or weak shapely raise as eight losers, and a game force or bidding straight to game having seven losers or less. Thus my hand was not worth game. What do you think?
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IMO, LTC is a helpful rule of thumb. But see quote below
I use the (almost equivalent) WTC:
- North has 6 winners (♠singlleton=2, ♥K=1, ♦A=1.5, ♣A =1.5)
- South has 4 winners (♠Q=0.5, ♥A=1.5, ♦doubleton=1, ♣K=1.
- Total winners = 11 (counting an extra winner for trump control).
Agree with Stephen Tu that South is worth a cue-bid -- or 2NT if that shows a 4-card raise. (with any more she might open the bidding). And North is worth a raise of 3♥. The game is worth bidding.