Is This Forcing
#1
Posted 2006-May-30, 06:42
1♣-(1♠)-Dbl-(p)
2♠-(p)-3♦-(p)
???
What kind of hand do you expect responder to have?
- hrothgar
#2
Posted 2006-May-30, 06:57
♠ J4
♥ KJ32
♦ Q107643
♣ 9
Take a diamond away and give him one club more, and he would still bid 3♦. So the answer to your question is:
Longer diamonds than hearts (4) and no extras. It seems sensible to play it as forcing nevertheless, because in my book opener promises another bid. 2♠ shows a strong hand.
Roland
#3
Posted 2006-May-30, 07:01
The way I play (which is not necessarily how everyone else plays) is that on a fair hand with 4 hearts and longer diamonds responder would bid 2D over the 1S overcall (any decent 10+ HCP); so in fact responder is showing a weak hand here.
#4
Posted 2006-May-30, 07:02
#5
Posted 2006-May-30, 07:05
FrancesHinden, on May 30 2006, 02:01 PM, said:
Agree. If you have a natural bid available and are strong enough, bid the suit as a one-round force. I do not play negative free bids.
Roland
#6
Posted 2006-May-30, 07:42
So the auction might not end after this.
#7
Posted 2006-May-30, 08:27
Assuming, you are playing change of suit
on the 2 level as forcing, 3D is nonforcing.
Sry, what do you think responder holds?
- A long suit (5+)?
In this case he cant have more than 10HCP, else
he could have bid 2D
- A fragment, i.e. at most 3 cards?
This would give him a 4 card club suit, or 5/6 card heart suit,
or a spade 4 card spade suit, in which case responder either
he would have bid 3C or 3H or sold the spade suuit as a stopper.
With kind regards
Marlowe
PS: You may argue, that 2S was self forcing, but opener knows
better than anybody else on the table, what hand he did have
for 2S, ... which means he can pass, if thinks 3D is best.
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#8
Posted 2006-May-30, 08:43
It is now up to opener to decide if he wishes to take further action, which he semi-promised that he would do when he made the 2♠ bid. I would expect him to always take a subsequent call, but one never knows.
So many experts, not enough X cards.
#9
Posted 2006-May-30, 08:51
P - (P) - 1♣ - (1♠)
Dbl - (P) - 2♠ - (P)
3♦ - (P) - ?
Which I find slightly different (others may not). I figure that once you have passed, none of your natural bids are forcing. (Obviously you can force with a cuebid.)
As an example, suppose you had ♠Txxx ♥AKxx ♦AJxx ♣Q.
After 1♣ - (1♠) - Dbl - (P); 2♠ - (P) - ?
You are now stuck for a good bid (do you bid 3♠?). Here you might like 3♦ to be forcing.
However, since you are a passed hand, I imagine it is slightly different.
#10
Posted 2006-May-30, 08:55
Echognome, on May 30 2006, 09:51 AM, said:
P - (P) - 1♣ - (1♠)
Dbl - (P) - 2♠ - (P)
3♦ - (P) - ?
Which I find slightly different (others may not). I figure that once you have passed, none of your natural bids are forcing. (Obviously you can force with a cuebid.)
As an example, suppose you had ♠Txxx ♥AKxx ♦AJxx ♣Q.
After 1♣ - (1♠) - Dbl - (P); 2♠ - (P) - ?
You are now stuck for a good bid (do you bid 3♠?). Here you might like 3♦ to be forcing.
However, since you are a passed hand, I imagine it is slightly different.
I would consider 3♦ to be an extreme underbid on this hand after opener bid 2♠. Partner either has a fit for one of your suits, or long running clubs and is looking for a spade stop. 3♠ seems about right as it should show a really good hand, but no spade stop.
So many experts, not enough X cards.
#11
Posted 2006-May-30, 09:12
#12
Posted 2006-May-30, 09:13
It certainly does not show anything extra, other than long(ish) ♦s, but nor does it deny a good 9 count or so. Indeed, I agree with Frances that it is bounded at the high end by the minimum strength required to bid 2♦ over 1♠, whatever that be in your style.
If you hold the 4=4 reds, with extras, no stopper, and no real ♣ support you punt with 3♠... telling partner you have no clear direction, no support for his suit, no ♠ stopper and extra values.
#13
Posted 2006-May-30, 09:18
If a bid is forcing to game or to a penalty double of opponents, then double is the exception to the above.
In the case presented, if the cue bid is only forcing, not forcing to game, then the response is not forcing. If 2 ♠ promises another bid, there should be one - which in effect makes 3 ♦ forcing.
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
Our ultimate goal on defense is to know by trick two or three everyone's hand at the table. -- Mike777
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#14
Posted 2006-May-30, 09:21
Perhaps its a matter of semantics, but IMO the cue by opener promises another call. So, 3D IS forcing, but it doesn't promise any strength either.
Comments?
#15
Posted 2006-May-30, 09:21
If you play a system where the double is made on any hand you don't want partner to pass the first time, you would like your next bid of a new suit to be about 80% forcing, roughly as forcing as a reverse but not as forcing as a jump shift.
However here he bid the opps' suit, and he forced YOU to bid.
Give the (undiscussed) normal situation of the double being a somewhat limited hand (WHY, btw? doubles ought to work the same in almost every situation, why do we confuse our learning players and then wonder why they cannot deal with high level auctions properly) then the 3D should be a weak bid since it is
a. forced
b. a new suit where 2♦ would have been at least a one round force in most people's argot (ie the positive FreeBidders).
It gets a bit difficult finding a forcing bid opposite a forcing bid, unless the 1♠ was a psyche. Sounds like someone else here was at the table, and if so, they're not telling.
In this case if you have a nice hand and want to make a forcing bid, cue bid again. The worst that can happen is pard raises you and he ain't going to do that on a 4 carder
Stephen
co-founder HomeBase Club, author of BRidgeBRowser
#16
Posted 2006-May-30, 09:24
mikeh, on May 30 2006, 04:13 PM, said:
Some people would say that 2S is forcing to game-or-4-of-a-minor (possibly even 3C). The idea is that you bid 2S with long clubs and no spade stop, but if partner can't bid NT you can drop it later in 4 clubs.
I don't play that way because although you can have hands with a long minor where you have the values for game but no game makes, I'd rather just go one off in 5m very occasionally and make my slam and choice-of-game bidding easier and clearer. It may be theoretically better to define some of these sequences as droppable, but life is too short to cope with the +190s that accrue as a result.
#17
Posted 2006-May-30, 09:56
FrancesHinden, on May 30 2006, 10:24 AM, said:
I don't play that way because although you can have hands with a long minor where you have the values for game but no game makes, I'd rather just go one off in 5m very occasionally and make my slam and choice-of-game bidding easier and clearer. It may be theoretically better to define some of these sequences as droppable, but life is too short to cope with the +190s that accrue as a result.
I think the point is that the 'values for game' you refer to are higher in a minor than they are in 3NT. Thus the approach I favor where when you try to get partner to bid 3NT and he can't do it, you can pass four of a minor, essentially treating that as game. I do not recall all these 190s you are referring to, I still bid game or slam when it will have a reasonable chance.
#18
Posted 2006-May-30, 09:59
#19
Posted 2006-May-30, 10:02
#20
Posted 2006-May-30, 10:22
I thought this was "standard", but apparently it is not
Fred Gitelman
Bridge Base Inc.
www.bridgebase.com

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