You're dealer, w/r. Butler.
4 or 5? Or 3?
#1
Posted 2013-June-15, 17:43
You're dealer, w/r. Butler.
wyman, on 2012-May-04, 09:48, said:
rbforster, on 2012-May-20, 21:04, said:
My YouTube Channel
#4
Posted 2013-June-15, 20:16
The issues are whether to preempt and, if so, what level of preemption to choose.
I just hate preempting at the 4 level if they are likely to have the majors. It seems like someone always Dbls and they end up playing 4 of a major.
So it comes down to either bidding 3 or 5.
NV, i'm going to be aggressive in making them guess what to do!
5 ♦
#5
Posted 2013-June-15, 20:18
in diamonds or nt. would open 4d but have enough junk
on the side to want to keep 3n in the picture. Too hard to
ever make future decisions properly after a 1d opening if
the bidding becomes competitive our almost zero defense
hand will make decisions made by partner invariably wrong.
3d has one additional benefit if p bids 3h or 4c we can raise
if we open 1d we will spend our entire auction trying to say
diamonds diamonds and please slow down p i have garbage.
#7
Posted 2013-June-15, 21:24
rmnka447, on 2013-June-15, 20:16, said:
The rule I like to blindly follow is the rule of 2. In first or second chair my preempts are designed to stick it to two people, not 3. I believe that QJ of clubs will throw a monkey wrench into CHO's evaluation of the combined ODR.
At least, if I open 1D and rebid them (say 2D, and 3D) partner might expect a little something useful outside for 3NT.
#8
Posted 2013-June-16, 01:31
rmnka447, on 2013-June-15, 20:16, said:
The issues are whether to preempt and, if so, what level of preemption to choose.
I just hate preempting at the 4 level if they are likely to have the majors. It seems like someone always Dbls and they end up playing 4 of a major.
My feeling is quite the opposite. I love pre-empting at the 4 level if they might have the majors. It seems like someone has to double on a not quite shape suitable hand, and they end up having to guess which major to play - and at what level.
#11
Posted 2013-June-18, 04:52
as for pre-empting at the 4 or 5 level, you'll often go for 500 against 4M-1 with so poor offence to defence. 4 is slightly better because partner might not have a hand to raise so you'll escape having to play in a daft contract and because they'll often guess wrong when it comes to choosing a major, unlike at the 5 level where they normally just take the money.
#12
Posted 2013-June-18, 05:03
wank, on 2013-June-18, 04:44, said:
For Zels standards this is closer to a semiforcing then to a preempt.
Roland
Sanity Check: Failure (Fluffy)
More system is not the answer...
#13
Posted 2013-June-18, 05:11
George Carlin
#14
Posted 2013-June-18, 05:35
Codo, on 2013-June-18, 05:03, said:
Half a playing trick short.
#15
Posted 2013-June-18, 06:57
rmnka447, on 2013-June-15, 20:16, said:
The issues are whether to preempt and, if so, what level of preemption to choose.
I just hate preempting at the 4 level if they are likely to have the majors. It seems like someone always Dbls and they end up playing 4 of a major.
So it comes down to either bidding 3 or 5.
NV, i'm going to be aggressive in making them guess what to do!
5 ♦
Agree, 4m is often just a slow transfer to 4M. Also 3m may sometimes be better than 4m because it gives them an extra way to go wrong (stop in 3 when game is there). Preempts are all about hoping they get it wrong. Put me down for 5♦.
-gwnn
#16
Posted 2013-June-18, 07:01
#18
Posted 2013-June-18, 09:07
#19
Posted 2013-June-18, 09:17
Style wise my pard will never play me for this (outside defence/stoppers) if I bid anything else but will play me for it when I keep repeating the suit.
What is baby oil made of?

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You're dealer, w/r. Butler