How about this one? New suit over 3 lvl preempt
#1
Posted 2010-June-25, 10:19
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
#2
Posted 2010-June-25, 10:22
wyman, on 2012-May-04, 09:48, said:
rbforster, on 2012-May-20, 21:04, said:
My YouTube Channel
#3
Posted 2010-June-25, 13:39
(LOL, have now voted and seen the results. I hope the people voting on the two polls are pretty much disjoint, otherwise there are a worrying number of people playing both 4♦ and 5♦ as natural.)
#5
Posted 2010-June-25, 14:24
campboy, on Jun 25 2010, 08:39 PM, said:
I play both 4♦ and 5♦ as natural. I'm sorry if that worries you.
5♦ says "I want to try to make eleven tricks with diamonds as trumps". 4♦ says "I have diamond length, and I'm uncertain about strain, level or both."
#6
Posted 2010-June-25, 14:26
blackshoe, on Jun 25 2010, 11:19 AM, said:
NATURAL
4C OVER 3S WOULD BE ACE ASKING, rkcb.
#7
Posted 2010-June-25, 15:31
campboy, on Jun 25 2010, 02:39 PM, said:
I believe those people are called bridge players with completely standard agreeements!
#8
Posted 2010-June-25, 15:35
Quote
Imagine that over 1♦ opening we play all the 1♥/2♥/3♥/4♥/5♥/6♥/7♥ bids as showing heartsl !
Being a little disjont after 3M doesn't worry my at all...
#9
Posted 2010-June-25, 16:23
#10
Posted 2010-June-25, 16:40
You bid 5♦ natural because you don't want partner to be involved (or your opponent with a 4♥ bid).
Do most not play 1♣ (1♦) 4♠ is natural even though 1♠ is natural and forcing?
#11
Posted 2010-June-25, 16:40
4♦ followed by 5♦ implies that I might have chosen a different final contract if partner had done something other than what he actually did. For example:
- If it goes 4♦-4♠;5♦, it's likely that I would have bid a slam opposite some more encouraging rebid.
- If it does 4♦-5♣;5♦ I might have been planning to pass 4♠, or I might have been planning to make a stronger move opposite a 4♥ bid.
This is like asking what the difference is between
1♥-1♠
1NT-4♠
and
1♥-4♠
Both 4♠ bids are to play, but the slower route implies that earlier in the auction there was a possibility of another contract.
#12
Posted 2010-June-25, 16:43
#13
Posted 2010-June-25, 16:49
Does 'Forcing natural' mean you have no agreements about openers rebid?
Or what is your expectation and why not mention it instead of pointlessly attacking Campboy.
#14
Posted 2010-June-25, 17:26
Anyway, if partner will pass after 3♠ - 4♦ - something - 5♦ with essentially the same hands on which he will pass after 3♠ - 5♦, there seems little point in following the latter route. I do not think this is at all like 1♥ - 4♠ where the difference in pre-emptive effect between fast and slow is massive. On the other hand, if the slow route encourages partner to bid on with hands where he might have passed an immediate 5♦ then you are essentially using the 5♦ response to improve your ability to investigate 6♦ after partner opens 3♠; it seems more sensible to me, on frequency grounds, to use it artificially in order to improve your ability to investigate 6♠.
#15
Posted 2010-June-25, 17:29
Pict, on Jun 25 2010, 11:49 PM, said:
I don't have any specific agreements with anyone about what opener's rebids mean, but I don't need to, because the default meanings are both obvious and adequate for such a rare sequence. 4♠ and 5♦ would be to play, and any new suit would be agreeing diamonds and showing a control, usually shortage.
Quote
I expect Campboy can look after himself, but I doubt if he feels "attacked" because he expressed an opinion, a few people disagreed with his opinion, he asked a followup question, and he received replies that were intended as both informative and civil.
#16
Posted 2010-June-25, 22:58
Given the time to make sensible agreements, 4-level CAB is my preference, so I voted for that.
#18
Posted 2010-June-26, 03:20
campboy, on Jun 25 2010, 06:26 PM, said:
You are missing the point that if you start with 4♦ you are not going to rebid 5♦ over everything partner does.
If you jump to 5♦ directly partner will always pass because you have said you want to play 5♦ no matter what he has. If you bid 4♦, partner bids something (the part you keep overlooking), and then you bid 5♦, partner will always pass because you have said you want to play 5♦ based on the something he bid over 4♦.
#19
Posted 2010-June-26, 03:29
jdonn, on Jun 25 2010, 10:40 PM, said:
(...)
2. Do most not play 1♣ (1♦) 4♠ is natural even though 1♠ is natural and forcing?
1. Involved into what? Pard is already very limited in terms of strength and shape. I would agree if it were
3m 3M
because then there's game in sight. But 3M 4m is slammish and those are far more rare than 4M games. Or than 6M slams after a 3M bid, for that matter.
Still, I don't object to it being natural.
2. That's a situation similar to 3m 3/4M, though this time responder is supposed to have a dead min preempt (so as not to make opener, who has a pretty wide range too nervous).
#20
Posted 2010-June-26, 04:00
jdonn, on Jun 26 2010, 10:20 AM, said:
If you jump to 5♦ directly partner will always pass because you have said you want to play 5♦ no matter what he has. If you bid 4♦, partner bids something (the part you keep overlooking), and then you bid 5♦, partner will always pass because you have said you want to play 5♦ based on the something he bid over 4♦.
I think Campboy's point is that if you want to play in 5♦ you can always bid 4♦ followed by 5♦. Therefore he can afford to use 5♦ as something else.
It seems doubtful to me that the gain from having that something else available outweighs the loss in the form of information leakage when it goes 4♦-something-5♦. Apart from anything else, on some of the hands where we were making five for sure but six if partner controlled a particular side suit, I would just bid slam and see how good at leading they were.
Still, we're talking about such rare hands that I don't have enough data to judge. I can't remember ever wanting to bid any number of diamonds opposite a 3♠ opener, for any purpose.
This post has been edited by gnasher: 2010-June-26, 04:02

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