DavidKok, on 2023-March-25, 04:42, said:
At the table I decided to bid 2
♠, reasoning that if partner didn't have the expected 3-card support he could pull to 3
♦. I didn't believe in defending 2
♥X, although maybe that should be rephrased as "I didn't believe partner".
My main reason for posting this hand was to learn what people think the double should express. There is a continuous range between 'take me out of this, always' at the one extreme and 'penalty - if you run go find a new partner' at the other, and I couldn't figure out how far along that range this double is. On the one hand, partner has given a complete description of their hand (9-10 with diamond support and great defence against hearts). On the other hand, so have I, and also we are doubling their voluntary raise to the 2-level at IMPs into game.
My 2
♠ ended the auction. LHO lead the ace of hearts, and dummy came down:
First trick
♥A-2-K-5, second trick
♦7-T-4-5. I don't think the play of the rest of the hand is particularly riveting, but feel free to share your thoughts. You can nearly pinpoint the distribution.
I understand partner's reluctance to bid 1NT on the first round, choosing to raise diamonds on a 3-card suit instead. I don't think partner's double was right, even though it matches the description perfectly (a maximum for the simple raise with an extremely defensively oriented hand). Which raises the question - should this double simply not exist?
Imo, the ‘penalty oriented double’ does not exist at imp scoring. Since I don’t play good bridge often enough (especially good mp bridge) to have different methods for mp and imps, it doesn’t exist at mps either. I’ve outlined my reasoning in earlier posts and see zero reason to modify my thoughts.
Btw, while I ‘understand’ not bidding 1N, I think the reasoning is mistaken. He has to choose a distortion not matter what he bids, including pass.
He’s too strong to pass…even if he can count on you reopening (and he can’t), passing only delays and exacerbates the problem (if you reopened with a double, I think 2H shows something like this but that’s an ugly sequence). He lacks a diamond for 2D….If you have short hearts, you’re getting tapped too often and, more importantly, you may overcompete since if you have short hearts, the opps may bid 2H and you’ll expect a fourth diamond. He lacks a heart card for 1N, but otherwise the hand is perfect.
When forced to distort, make the cheapest of equal distortions. 1N describes the shape and strength and 10xxx is fine for 1N anyway. If you’re passing, and they run hearts, you’ll have a good shot at 7 tricks most of the time. If you bid 3N, given the aces he’s holding, you will usually have some help in hearts
If not, too bad. Nothing’s perfect but, to me, 1N comes closest and is cheapest so it’s a clear winner
Btw, in my partnerships 1S over 1H denies spades, or the ability to raise diamonds or to bid 1N. It will often be based on some club length….a prototypical hand might be xxx xx Axx KQxxx but xxx in hearts and a 3334 is also common. I’d be considering 1S, which is cheaper yet than 1N but I’d reject it. We belong in 1N far too often when partner has Qx or Jx or Jxx and can’t bid notrump.
We double with 4-5 spades and bid 2H with six spades, without promising strength.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari