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My very bad bid

Poll: My very bad bid (46 member(s) have cast votes)

What is your choice here?

  1. Pass (1 votes [2.17%])

    Percentage of vote: 2.17%

  2. 2H (4 votes [8.70%])

    Percentage of vote: 8.70%

  3. 2S (40 votes [86.96%])

    Percentage of vote: 86.96%

  4. 2NT (1 votes [2.17%])

    Percentage of vote: 2.17%

  5. Something else? (0 votes [0.00%])

    Percentage of vote: 0.00%

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#1 User is offline   silvr bull 

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Posted 2014-October-08, 11:05

Partner says my bid here is one of the worst he has ever seen! What would you bid as South?
IMPs with random BBO opponents.

Open 5 card majors. 1NT forces one more bid.

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#2 User is offline   Lord Molyb 

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Posted 2014-October-08, 11:09

2. Your values aren't good enough to invite outright and you should "correct" to the 5-2 fit.
2 isn't terrible but it's likely to get you into the wrong strain. Pass could work out too.
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#3 User is offline   helene_t 

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Posted 2014-October-08, 11:37

It is unusual that 1nt is forcing by a passed hand.

I think pass is very bad and 2nt is quite bad. 2 is not terrible but with a 5332 13-count partner might have passed 1nt, and 5143 is more likely than 5341 now that hearts is my long suit.
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#4 User is offline   mikeh 

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Posted 2014-October-08, 12:17

I adopt helene's comment re 1N as a passed hand. At most it is usually played as 'semi-forcing' by a passed hand.

As for what to bid, 2 is a 'wtp' choice.

Pass is silly for multiple reasons, including:

1) a 5-2 is probably better/safer than a 4-3, especially with 2 honours in spades
2) partner may be just short of a jumpshift and will bid again over 2. If so, then game is a strong favourite and is unreachable after pass


2 is silly because partner should pass it with a stiff, which will not result in a good contract. It is how you bid with a bad 6 card suit. Now, some might argue that you can't hold 6+ hearts and not have pre-empted, but that isn't good bridge. Imagine x Jxxxxxx Kx Qxx.

2n is a gross overbid.

so 2 is a standout bid.

I'm not sure which of 2N or 2 would qualify as the one of the worst bids he'd ever seen....they are horrible but he's led a sheltered life if he hasn't seen worse. Of course, maybe you did worse :P Technically, passing isn't a bid, btw.
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#5 User is offline   gszes 

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Posted 2014-October-08, 12:50

Since your 1n is forcing (even by a passed hand) there is no guarantee p has 4
diamonds (5332) so passing 2d is just as scary if not more so than converting to 2s
which conceivably could be into a 42 spade fit (though never if you always have
at least 5 opposite a passed hand--strongly recommended). This hand could easily be
a mild misfit and treating it as invitational or better is a huge overbid.
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#6 User is offline   neilkaz 

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Posted 2014-October-08, 12:51

I would NOT play 1NTF by a passed hand. Anyhow, here, easy 2 bid, Be happy that you have JT in support rather than 2 small. I'd not introduce that mediocre (at best) suit which PD should be able to pass with a stiff. Passing 2 might leave you in a 3-3 fit on a bad day.

2NT is a gross overbid and would be a candidate for worst bid seen.
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#7 User is offline   helene_t 

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Posted 2014-October-08, 13:01

View Postgszes, on 2014-October-08, 12:50, said:

conceivably could be into a 42 spade fit

No, if you open 1 on a 4-card suit in third seat it is with the intention to pass any response. So the rebid confirms 5+ spades.
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#8 User is offline   billw55 

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Posted 2014-October-08, 13:02

2 > pass >> 2 > 2NT.

Quote

I'm not sure which of 2N or 2 would qualify as the one of the worst bids he'd ever seen....they are horrible but he's led a sheltered life if he hasn't seen worse.

Agree.
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#9 User is offline   Manastorm 

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Posted 2014-October-08, 13:46

2 is an easy choice for me. No clear support for any suit, not enough values to invite NT, dont have my own suit and 5-2 spades with JT should be ok, maybe partner finds another bid, then I got something. 2 is an attempt to find a miserable 5-1 fit. I dont think 2NT is as bad as some say, my 3rd choice actually.
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#10 User is offline   steve2005 

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Posted 2014-October-08, 14:24

yes would like to know his bid. only 2N is completely hideous.
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#11 User is offline   TylerE 

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Posted 2014-October-08, 14:42

I'm dissapointed in you guys. No yet has mentioned our obligation to show support for partner by raising to 3? <_<
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#12 User is offline   Bbradley62 

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Posted 2014-October-08, 15:00

If we're not careful, we may set a BBO Forums record for the highest number of unanimous votes.

Edit: Seriously? Within an hour of my post someone voted for 2??

This post has been edited by Bbradley62: 2014-October-08, 16:02

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#13 User is offline   chasetb 

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Posted 2014-October-08, 15:15

I disagree with most of you! I think 2NT is better than 2 as the third best bid -> we have some strength in both, and especially if they attack we have great stoppers. I also expect 6+ for 2.

2 is easily my first choice, and Pass is second. A good rule of thumb here is you should have at least 2 more cards in the second suit than the first in order to pass, or 1 more card if you have 4+ more HCP in that suit.

EDIT - I agree that 1NT should only be Semi-Forcing by a Passed Hand.
"It's not enough to win the tricks that belong to you. Try also for some that belong to the opponents."

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#14 User is offline   mycroft 

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Posted 2014-October-08, 15:28

"If you have never been passed in Blackwood, you can not win an individual." - Jeff Goldsmith

So, if any call you may have reasonably made is the worst call partner's ever seen, he's never won an individual...
When I go to sea, don't fear for me, Fear For The Storm -- Birdie and the Swansong (tSCoSI)
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#15 User is offline   whereagles 

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Posted 2014-October-08, 16:18

I hereby express my choice of joining the "2 wtp" bandwagon.
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#16 User is offline   rmnka447 

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Posted 2014-October-08, 22:07

I'm also in the 2 camp.

If partner has 4 , then you have a known 5-2 fit and a 4-3 fit. It's usually better to play in the 5-2 fit.
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#17 User is offline   silvr bull 

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Posted 2014-October-08, 22:58

Thanks for all the responses. I have now added my unrepentant vote for 2. :D Can someone tell me how to add a signature to all my posts? I would like mine to read "I am a stranger in a strange land." :rolleyes: I expected a nearly unanimous vote, but in favor of 2 :unsure:

If my hand was weak (xx Jxxxx Qxx Kxx for example), I would have bid 2S in a flash, and hope it goes all pass. But my hand is stronger than that minimum, and I can dream that partner might have better than a minimum too. Suppose opener has something like Axxxx QJx AKxx x (or possibly Kxxxx Qxxx AKJx void). A 2 bid by me will end the auction, and we might eek out a plus there, but I would much rather be in 4. I can also imagine hands that would play well in 3NT (with a helpful contribution from my JT), but partner needs to hear something forward going from me to get there. If opener has the dreaded stiff and a minimum, there will still be no problem if he does not panic about a possible misfit and pass ensuring a misfit, but bids again instead. After making what I consider to be a mildly forward going bid, I can happily pass if opener rebids his 5 card suit, and no harm would have been done by my shot at finding a good fit on the way to a sell out at 2. If this is a real misfit and I have the weak hand that wanted to play in 2, then I can rebid the suit and partner can pass with a stiff, knowing that he too did his best to avoid a bad situation. Getting one trick higher in a misfit is not desirable, but I think the possible gain from treating the 2 bid as forward going with a 5 card suit outweighs the possible risk.

After a few more replies, I will post partner's hand too so all can see how my 2 bid turned out. Hint, it was not pretty. :o
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#18 User is offline   mikeh 

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Posted 2014-October-08, 23:13

View Postsilvr bull, on 2014-October-08, 22:58, said:

Thanks for all the responses. I have now added my unrepentant vote for 2. :D Can someone tell me how to add a signature to all my posts? I would like mine to read "I am a stranger in a strange land." :rolleyes: I expected a nearly unanimous vote, but in favor of 2 :unsure:

If my hand was weak (xx Jxxxx Qxx Kxx for example), I would have bid 2S in a flash, and hope it goes all pass. But my hand is stronger than that minimum, and I can dream that partner might have better than a minimum too. Suppose opener has something like Axxxx QJx AKxx x (or possibly Kxxxx Qxxx AKJx void). A 2 bid by me will end the auction, and we might eek out a plus there, but I would much rather be in 4. I can also imagine hands that would play well in 3NT (with a helpful contribution from my JT), but partner needs to hear something forward going from me to get there. If opener has the dreaded stiff and a minimum, there will still be no problem if he does not panic about a possible misfit and pass ensuring a misfit, but bids again instead. After making what I consider to be a mildly forward going bid, I can happily pass if opener rebids his 5 card suit, and no harm would have been done by my shot at finding a good fit on the way to a sell out at 2. If this is a real misfit and I have the weak hand that wanted to play in 2, then I can rebid the suit and partner can pass with a stiff, knowing that he too did his best to avoid a bad situation. Getting one trick higher in a misfit is not desirable, but I think the possible gain from treating the 2 bid as forward going with a 5 card suit outweighs the possible risk.

After a few more replies, I will post partner's hand too so all can see how my 2 bid turned out. Hint, it was not pretty. :o

You are guilty of allowing what you hold to influence your understanding of what 2 means. You'd like it to be constructive with 5 hearts. It isn't. Wishing it were doesn't make it so. The fact that you can construct hands on which partner will have bid 2 and 4 is a good contract is a snare and illusion. Until you learn that, you will never become a good bidder. You have to accept the limitations of whatever system you have agreed to play...and every system has limitations, every single one. In standard, 2 is a weak to constructive hand with 6+ hearts, and since you are a passed hand, that says your suit isn't appropriate for a weak 2. Partner is usually going to pass. If he bids, then he was going to bid over 2 so you were worried about the wrong thing. He will not be rebidding a 5 card spade suit and you are deluding yourself, again, when you entertain that possibility. At least, not if he has any basic understanding of bidding.
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#19 User is offline   fourdad 

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Posted 2014-October-09, 04:05

This is only a problem because 1NT is forcing as a passed hand! Can't wait to see your partners hand, as I am betting a pass of 1NT would have been a more than reasonable, if not best, choice. 1NT forcing here begs the question, "how will you ever know if your pd opened light?" 1NT forcing is a systemic flaw that needs correcting.
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#20 User is offline   m1cha 

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Posted 2014-October-09, 04:35

I agree with most here that the system bid with the S hand is 2. But that doesn't automatically make 2 such a bad bid. I see it this way (using your quote, Mike, with the strike-out being my edit[!]):

View Postmikeh, on 2014-October-08, 23:13, said:

In standard, 2 is a weak to constructive hand with 6+ hearts[!], and since you are a passed hand, that says your suit isn't appropriate for a weak 2. Partner is usually going to pass


and continue "and from this we infer that it is usually a 6-card suit". 2 essentially suggests misfits in opener's suits. But if you cannot bid 2 with a 5-card suit, what will you do with a 1-5-2-5 hand after 2 from opener? Let him play 2 in a 4-2 fit? 2 in a 5-1 fit? Bid 2NT with 8 HCP or less? Or will you play 2 which is probably good?

Opposite a partner who has exactly 5 spades and denied 4 hearts, I expect the following number of cards in hearts:
3 (42.4 %)
2 (38.3 %)
1 (16.6 %)
0 ( 2.7 %)
2 seems to do good rather than harm in most cases, so if we bid 2 instead of 2 the reason is not so much that 2 is such a bad bid but that 2 is what most players expect us to do with a doubleton in , and that I don't risk upsetting partner just in case he's really short in hearts. And yes, because partner may still have a 6-card suit. Yet, once we agreed that 2 CAN be a 5-card suit given the circumstances, the reason for failing to open 2 may be right that it actually IS a 5-card suit, so opener should be alerted.

From what I have read so far, I guess N hat a hand such as (a) 5-0-5-3 or (b) 6-0-4-3, passed, and things went real weird. In that case I would say - twisting your words again, Mike - N was "guilty of allowing what you [N] hold to influence your understanding of what 2 [by S] means." Actually, if I were N and the dummy came down after I passed 2 with hand (a), well, partner plays, so I get myself a snack and welcome the next board ;) . With hand (b) I would bid 2 over 2 and cross fingers.

By the way, with that hand of yours,

View Postmikeh, on 2014-October-08, 12:17, said:

x Jxxxxxx Kx Qxx

I think I would open 2. I am aware this is not a system bid and I am aware this may go wrong sometimes. But I think partner will usually do the right thing (trying to assess my strength) while opponents will usually miscount the tricks. So I expect it will do more good than bad.
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