How do you bid this hand playing 2/1? 1D-1S-??? 42 KQJ982 Q43 109
#1
Posted 2006-April-21, 00:18
#2
Posted 2006-April-21, 01:05
I take it, that you do not play neg. free
bids. I think the hand is borderline for
a forcing 2H, but you will survive most
of the time, unless 2H is game forcing.
With kind regards
Marlowe
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#3
Posted 2006-April-21, 02:43
Roland
Sanity Check: Failure (Fluffy)
More system is not the answer...
#4
Posted 2006-April-21, 04:22
That said, 2H does promise some values, something like 10+ (it's possible to stretch with a great suit).
This hand isn't quite good enough (it's close though), and so you double first and then bid hearts, which is the standard way to show a long heart suit in a hand not good enough for 2H.
In this particular situation, there's no harm in this (you've promised 4 hearts, then when you bid again you're just showing more) and so basically everyone plays this way. Some other auctions are more controversial:
1D (2C) X. Can this be done with a long heart suit or a long spade suit in a hand not good enough to bid 2M? The usual suggestion is that it is ok, but partner isn't really supposed to cater to it, so you should be ok correcting partner's jump bid in the other major to your major at whatever level. Some find this frightening with hearts (it's easier to outbid partner when you have spades) and only do it with long spades.
1H (1S) X. Can this be a long minor? Most would want to have at least 3 cards in the other minor to do this, and probably only with diamonds, not clubs, basically because you're ok whatever happens: if partner bids clubs at a low level, you correct to diamonds, and if partner jumps to 5C or some such, you probably just pass.
Andy
#5
Posted 2006-April-21, 05:15
#6
Posted 2006-April-21, 05:30
Codo, on Apr 21 2006, 08:43 AM, said:
what he said
#7
Posted 2006-April-21, 08:02
As for playing strength, I think this hand is fine for 2H. The DQ is nice and 6 good hearts are useful. Treating it as "invitational" with hearts feels right. It lacks the defense that is generally required for this bid.
Modern experts also tend to make this bid when they have a diamond fit and 5 hearts and are light. It's a bidders game.
#8
Posted 2006-April-22, 07:45
I have hearts and values, so I bid hearts.
#9
Posted 2006-April-22, 10:51
In -THEORY- dbl and then hearts might be correct but in practice I think that bidding 2♥ with such a good suit can't be very bad. So I would experiment bidding 2♥.
Luis
#10
Posted 2006-April-22, 11:20
In -THEORY- dbl and then hearts might be correct but in practice I think that bidding 2♥ with such a good suit can't be very bad. So I would experiment bidding 2♥."
Agree, though it is close. 2H is an overbid, but if you double, you will never be able to convince pd you have this suit.
Peter
#11
Posted 2006-May-02, 05:52
luis, on Apr 22 2006, 06:51 PM, said:
In -THEORY- dbl and then hearts might be correct but in practice I think that bidding 2♥ with such a good suit can't be very bad. So I would experiment bidding 2♥.
Luis
pbleighton, on Apr 22 2006, 07:20 pm, said:
In -THEORY- dbl and then hearts might be correct but in practice I think that bidding 2♥ with such a good suit can't be very bad. So I would experiment bidding 2♥."
Agree, though it is close. 2H is an overbid, but if you double, you will never be able to convince pd you have this suit.
Peter
Imho 100% rite Luis and Peter
I'm sure if you put this hand in an tourney about 90% of the players will bid 2♥.
Perhaps jdeegan can provide us with the link, where this hand happened so we can look up if I'm rite.
Perhaps Stephen (sfbp) likes to run this through his BrBr.
Sincerly
Al
♠♥♠ BAD bidding may be succesful due to excellent play, but not vice versa. ♦♣♦
Teaching in the BIL TUE 8:00am CET.
Lessons available. For INFO look here: Play bridge with Al
#12
Posted 2006-May-05, 09:56
1D-(1S)-??
holding 42.KQJ982.Q43.T9
It's close between X then bid H's to show a minimum with long H's or a direct 2H bid showing 10+ playing points (8 HCP + H suit that will play for 1 loser opposite Hx + nice intermediates in H's and C's).
To me, the location of Qxx makes all the difference.
Qxx in GOP's suit means that it is odds on that We have at least a fit and the Q is working.
Qxx in the om means the Q has a non ignorable chance of being waste paper.
2H in the 1st case. X intending to rebid H's in the 2nd case.
#13
Posted 2006-May-05, 10:03
for the (forcing) free bidders, how can partner ever tell whether you're 2632 with an 8 count vs. 2632 with a 12 count? this is a very good nfb in my opinion, 7/8-11 and not forcing
#14
Posted 2006-May-05, 10:05
luke warm, on May 5 2006, 11:03 AM, said:
for the (forcing) free bidders, how can partner ever tell whether you're 2632 with an 8 count vs. 2632 with a 12 count? this is a very good nfb in my opinion, 7/8-11 and not forcing
I think the doublers all made it clear they would rebid hearts at the cheapest (reasonable) level at their next turn, so 3♥ there for better or worse. Partner will at least have a good idea of our hand.
I sort of agree with others that 2♥ the first time is technically wrong, but often works out pretty well.
#15
Posted 2006-May-05, 10:57
#16
Posted 2006-May-05, 12:02
luke warm, on May 5 2006, 11:03 AM, said:
for the (forcing) free bidders, how can partner ever tell whether you're 2632 with an 8 count vs. 2632 with a 12 count? this is a very good nfb in my opinion, 7/8-11 and not forcing
If I decide to X, then the auction 1D-(1S)-X-(2S);-pa-pa-?? gives me the opportunity to clarify the strength range of my hand.
With a minimum Negative X, I pass. With maximum Negative X, I make a bid.
xx.KQJxxx.Qxx.xx is clearly in the top half of the hands I might X with, so I'm bidding 3H.
If I decide to bid 2H, then the auction 1D-(1S)-2H-(2S);pa-pa-?? gives me the opportunity to clarify the strength of my hand...
xx.KQJxxx.Qxx.xx is clearly in the bottom half of the hands I might bid 2H with, so I'm passing.
With good hands, and certainly with an Opening bid facing an Opening bid (12 HCP with KQJxxx of H's is definitely an Opening bid), I'm doing something along the lines of bidding 3H (usually considered Forcing here), or cue bidding 3S, or even bidding 3N (if I have S's stopped.) depending on my hand.
Regardless, "CHO" should have minimal problems with regards to what to do next.
#17
Posted 2006-May-05, 13:57
Now are all the doublers willing to bid 4H on the hand? If not, what action do you plan on taking?
I think an immediate 2H, while a slight overbid, will help partner decide what to do when this is the case.
So many experts, not enough X cards.
#18
Posted 2006-May-05, 14:18
bid_em_up, on May 5 2006, 02:57 PM, said:
Now are all the doublers willing to bid 4H on the hand? If not, what action do you plan on taking?
I think an immediate 2H, while a slight overbid, will help partner decide what to do when this is the case.
Well the 2♥ bidders have to worry about...
1D-(1S)-x-(3S)-4C-p-?.
Now do they bid 4♥ or correct to 3♦. And if they bid 4♥, will their partner play them for a better hand, given they didn't make weak jump overcall? Or at us vul, them not, how about 1D-(1S)-2H-(4S); Pass-(Pass)-?
Does partner think his pass is forcing? What if partner doubles 4♠ (or EVEN 3♠ on the auction you gave) thinking we have some defense. Where is our defense? The ♦Queen in partner suit? The slow hearts in our long suit?
What I am suggesting is what is obvious from the replies to this thread. Nothing is clear cut right: dbl, 2♥, 3♥ all have flaws. I suspect the 2♥ bidders are going to try to insist on hearts (and the doublers are too).
In the real world, I play transfer advance here and bid tranfer into ♥, negative free bid or better values. Even with this bid, it is not clear the follow ups in competition will be easy.
#19
Posted 2006-May-06, 07:35
foo, on May 5 2006, 01:02 PM, said:
xx.KQJxxx.Qxx.xx is clearly in the bottom half of the hands I might bid 2H with, so I'm passing.
Hi,
I dont think that you can pass out,
at least for me partners pass was
forcing.
The situation
1D - (1S) - 2H (1) - (2S)
pass - ...
(1) forcing for one round
is similar to the situation
1D - (pass) - 2H (2) - (2S)
pass ---
(2) forcing for one, promising a
rebid or even forcing to game
And in the later situation partners pass is clearly
forcing.
Holding your original hand you clearly have to bid 3H.
If you dont like this, you will have to dbl.
With kind regards
Marlowe
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#20
Posted 2006-May-06, 07:38
bid_em_up, on May 5 2006, 02:57 PM, said:
Now are all the doublers willing to bid 4H on the hand? If not, what action do you plan on taking?
<snip>
Pass, wtp?
Did your hand get any stronger during
the bidding, do you think you miss game?
No, so pass.
With kind regards
Marlowe
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)

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