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Are you constrained?

Poll: Are you constrained? (26 member(s) have cast votes)

After the BIT

  1. I bid 2S (19 votes [73.08%] - View)

    Percentage of vote: 73.08%

  2. I must pass (5 votes [19.23%] - View)

    Percentage of vote: 19.23%

  3. I pass regardless of BIT (2 votes [7.69%] - View)

    Percentage of vote: 7.69%

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#1 User is online   jillybean 

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Posted 2015-November-15, 18:47

A hand from NAP Flight A



You chose to pass in first seat, LHO opens a 12-14 NT, partner makes an obvious pause before passing.

Will you consider bidding now or are you constrained by partners BIT?
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#2 User is offline   blackshoe 

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Posted 2015-November-15, 20:55

Of course I'll consider it. The question is whether I'll do it. B-)

Partner's hitch suggests he has more than minimum values. This suggests that the points around the table are at worst roughly evenly divided, and that suggests that I balance. If pass is a logical alternative, then I should pass. But is it? It doesn't seem to me that it is. If it's not, then I can bid. So I bid. If I have failed to carefully avoid taking advantage of UI, so be it.
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#3 User is offline   WesleyC 

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Posted 2015-November-15, 21:04

On one hand, the fact that this hand passed in 1st seat rather than opening 2S, suggests passing out 1NT might be a logical alternative, at least for this player.

As a counterpoint, after (1NT) P (P) the opponents have denied game values and it's easy to come up with hands where both 1NT and 2S are making. You could make a strong case that even if you passed originally, bidding now is more likely to gain and less likely to lose.

Only way to come up with a fair judgement would be to poll several players of a similar skill level.

FWIW I personally would never pass.
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#4 User is offline   aguahombre 

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Posted 2015-November-15, 21:32

Bidding vs a 12-14 nt without full 2-level overcall strength is very dangerous, especially red. The BIT reduces that risk, IMO. I don't think it reaches the level of "must" pass, because "must" is a very strong word connoting evil if we don't do what we "must"; so, I just choose to pass because I think I have too much information to bid.

And, good decision not to open 2 in 1st unfavorable; without that Jack of clubs, I might.
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#5 User is offline   ahydra 

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Posted 2015-November-16, 03:57

Need to poll other players - it's quite close. Partner and I protect quite aggressively so this would be a clear 2S bid with the 6th spade.

ahydra
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#6 User is offline   aguahombre 

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Posted 2015-November-16, 06:30

View Postahydra, on 2015-November-16, 03:57, said:

Need to poll other players - it's quite close. Partner and I protect quite aggressively so this would be a clear 2S bid with the 6th spade.

ahydra

If you think it is close, you already know there is an alternative to bidding 2. No need to poll other players; the poll is to determine if there are alternatives, not what ruling to give.
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#7 User is offline   billw55 

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Posted 2015-November-16, 07:31

No, I do not think you are constrained. West's pass shows that partner has values, at least 8 points and often more.

In general in situations like this, I prefer to make my normal bid, and let the director decide to allow it or not. I feel that passing here would amount to making a ruling, which players should not do. Besides my partner, other contestants are also entitled to a correct ruling, especially in a matchpoint event.
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#8 User is offline   sfi 

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Posted 2015-November-16, 08:56

View PostWesleyC, on 2015-November-15, 21:04, said:

On one hand, the fact that this hand passed in 1st seat rather than opening 2S, suggests passing out 1NT might be a logical alternative, at least for this player.


I don't see the initial pass as suggesting this at all. Surely if you pass, you do so because it doesn't fit an initial 2-level action but you plan to show it by bidding later. For instance, the outside ace, moderate suit quality, and 3 hearts are all negative features for an initial preempt, but don't stop the hand from having reasonable playing strength.

In fact, I see passing as less likely after the initial pass rather than more. You know partner will now play you for a flawed weak two, whatever that looks like in the partnership, and won't hang you with moderate values. In fact, I would feel constrained to bid if I had UI that partner were unusually weak for this auction. So bidding here looks obvious to me.
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#9 User is online   Cyberyeti 

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Posted 2015-November-16, 09:21

Is partner's hitch definitely favouring bidding ? The most likely hand you want to bid opposite is a weak no trump which is an easy pass. Maybe partner has 5 diamonds and 4 hearts and is wondering whether he has enough to bid.
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#10 User is offline   steve2005 

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Posted 2015-November-16, 15:58

If west doesn't have the balls to open 2 in 1st seat Vul vs NV. I don't see how knowing there is 12-14 points sitting behind him and possibly 10 points or even a bad 11 with other opponent is going to get up the courage to bid without BIT?
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#11 User is offline   steve2005 

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Posted 2015-November-16, 16:11

View Postsfi, on 2015-November-16, 08:56, said:

I don't see the initial pass as suggesting this at all. Surely if you pass, you do so because it doesn't fit an initial 2-level action but you plan to show it by bidding later. For instance, the outside ace, moderate suit quality, and 3 hearts are all negative features for an initial preempt, but don't stop the hand from having reasonable playing strength.

In fact, I see passing as less likely after the initial pass rather than more. You know partner will now play you for a flawed weak two, whatever that looks like in the partnership, and won't hang you with moderate values. In fact, I would feel constrained to bid if I had UI that partner were unusually weak for this auction. So bidding here looks obvious to me.

Of course your partner isn't going to hang you, your a passed hand.

But knowing partner has some values makes 2 a much safer proposition.
I too would likely bid this hand, but wouldn't get the chance as I would have opened 2, which by the way is safer than coming in now.
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#12 User is offline   mycroft 

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Posted 2015-November-16, 16:32

So, partner has "at least 8", and by "at least 8", we mean 14-11-9 = 6. Probably not - many 11s will invite (but many will not, especially if they know you'll balance on anything and they'll have a good shot at 200 into no game or 500 into NV game), but possible.

Does partner have 6? After the hitch, of course not. Partner has 10 or 11, maybe even 12 with no real suit to bid. Are we going for 200 (or 500) into 90 or 120? Also, of course not. Are there dangers? Well, yes; the most likely one is turning +50 into -100 on bad breaks everywhere. But the chance of pulling +100 into +110 is much much higher.

Were you to ask if I'd balance with this hand? At matchpoints, almost certainly - at teams, 500 into nothing is awfully scary, even if it's very low percentage, and turning a potential -150 into -500 is still turning win 6 or 7 into lose 3 or 2 against our teammates 3NT. Partner will probably take me for what I have - a weak 2 that has too much outside to have opened.

As everyone is saying, the question isn't "is 2 suggested by the UI" - of course it is. It's "is pass an LA?". I don't know the answer to that, but I do know that WeaSeL is still the best defence to weak NTs.
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#13 User is offline   steve2005 

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Posted 2015-November-16, 18:15

I know many at our club who use WeaSel vs weak NT.
It was even worse before you had to announce your NT range in ACBLland.
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#14 User is offline   richlp 

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Posted 2015-November-16, 19:13

View Postjillybean, on 2015-November-15, 18:47, said:

A hand from NAP Flight A



You chose to pass in first seat, LHO opens a 12-14 NT, partner makes an obvious pause before passing.

Will you consider bidding now or are you constrained by partners BIT?


FWIW.......I'm usually very conservative in these kinds of auctions and would probably pass out 1NT. That may take me out of the "peer" pool for a polling question.


A side question for the panel.........

Do your partners have a problem passing balanced hands of moderate strength at this vulnerability vs a weak NT?

Could this hesitation mean that partner has close to bidding values with an unbalanced hand and chose not to bid because of the vulnerability? If so, then does the hesitation suggest a misfit and that pass might be the winning action?



I'm usually pretty bad at figuring out the answers to these sorts of questions (what does the hestitation suggest). I've been ruled against because I got the "suggestion" wrong and took the "winning" action for the "wrong" reason so I usually just make the bid I think is right and let the director (or committee) make the ultimate decision.
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#15 User is offline   sfi 

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Posted 2015-November-16, 20:40

View Poststeve2005, on 2015-November-16, 15:58, said:

If west doesn't have the balls to open 2 in 1st seat Vul vs NV. I don't see how knowing there is 12-14 points sitting behind him and possibly 10 points or even a bad 11 with other opponent is going to get up the courage to bid without BIT?


It's not about courage or safety. There are entirely valid reasons why this hand may not be suitable for a weak 2 in this partnership, and I'm certain this hand would be within the strength range of their agreements. Thinking that North will continue to pass just because they didn't open the first time is a poor argument - not everyone plays like you do.

And yes, opening initially may be safer than bidding here. That doesn't necessarily make passing a logical alternative for someone who passed as dealer.
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#16 User is offline   sfi 

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Posted 2015-November-16, 20:44

View PostCyberyeti, on 2015-November-16, 09:21, said:

Is partner's hitch definitely favouring bidding ? The most likely hand you want to bid opposite is a weak no trump which is an easy pass. Maybe partner has 5 diamonds and 4 hearts and is wondering whether he has enough to bid.


Maybe, but what is the likelihood of that compared to a hand that has good values and secondary spade support but no clear action? Even if the actual hand may not be what is expected, the break in tempo definitely suggests bidding will be more successful in the long run than a smooth pass would. As mycroft said, the only real question is whether pass is a logical alternative.
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#17 User is online   Cyberyeti 

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Posted 2015-November-17, 06:28

View Postsfi, on 2015-November-16, 20:44, said:

Maybe, but what is the likelihood of that compared to a hand that has good values and secondary spade support but no clear action? Even if the actual hand may not be what is expected, the break in tempo definitely suggests bidding will be more successful in the long run than a smooth pass would. As mycroft said, the only real question is whether pass is a logical alternative.


I really don't agree, I know if MY partner hitches and passes, it's very unlikely to be a particularly good hand, and he'll have been thinking whether his hand is worth a 2 suited bid or a WJO at this vul and decided that it isn't. I would feel constrained if anything to be MORE aggressive on a potential misfit here, and would certainly bid what I consider the routine 2.

The only good hand partner is likely to hold is a single suited minor where the thought is whether to make a shaded X or overweight WJO as we don't otherwise have a bid for this.
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#18 User is offline   billw55 

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Posted 2015-November-17, 07:16

View Postmycroft, on 2015-November-16, 16:32, said:

So, partner has "at least 8", and by "at least 8", we mean 14-11-9 = 6. Probably not - many 11s will invite (but many will not, especially if they know you'll balance on anything and they'll have a good shot at 200 into no game or 500 into NV game), but possible.

If I am playing people who will blithely turn their backs on game holding 25 points, I expect good results anyway. I certainly don't expect such nice wallflowers to double me very often. But yes, there is a risk, and yes, I did overlook the club jack.
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#19 User is offline   mycroft 

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Posted 2015-November-17, 21:05

When it's "at most 25, and two dead balanced hands", especially at matchpoints, also especially when the field has found their fit if there is one, I'll go for +150. On the odd occasions when it is 14/11 and everyone else is in game, oh well. In the even occasions where it's 12 opposite a misfitting 11, and I'm +90 for all the matchpoints, oh well, too.

Wallflower? Maybe. But I've played too many 23-point flat mashes in 2NT-one more than it could have been. I also know that the most pleasant results playing a weak NT is when they step in and we get to wield the axe.
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#20 User is offline   aguahombre 

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Posted 2015-November-17, 22:05

View Postmycroft, on 2015-November-17, 21:05, said:

I also know that the most pleasant results playing a weak NT is when they step in and we get to wield the axe.

So, for you, passing is a logical alternative to bidding 2s. Earlier, you agreed that 2s could have been suggested over pass by the BIT but didn't know if pass was a LA; we are making progress.
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