what is upper limit for a pass
#1
Posted 2010-June-30, 15:14
best defense for that is a pass
I pass
i pass with 13 and even 14 if i have to, and i quietly sharpen the axe
if i open, i promise my partner certain holdings, but if i pass he is none the wiser
did that the other day, then the mini no trumper wants to call the td, because then he says he only opens mini no trump when he is not vulnerable and moon is crescent.
one of my best auctions goes pass-pass- 1club grabage by opp- pass by me holding 0-20 - 1 heart non forcing by opp-pass-pass- 1nt by me promising, well 0-20
they take out i leave it
they double i leave it when i have the 20
#2
Posted 2010-June-30, 15:39
Just ignore the negative inference from passing opps (and when you open in 1st seat they haven't bid or passed yet so what system they play is irrelevant).
1st seat open almost all rule of 20 hands, 2nd seat open most rule of 20 hands, 3rd seat idem but also open some balanced 9-11 counts that are likely to be able to control the auction and where opening serve some purpose, 4th seat don't believe in the rule of 15, most rule of 14 hands should open as well.
#3
Posted 2010-June-30, 15:48
#4
Posted 2010-June-30, 21:16
I certainly alter my preempting style depending on what my LHO plays. Is there some specific rule that says that an opening one bid is different?
codo said:
eugene hung said:
#5
Posted 2010-June-30, 21:39
I once opened 1nt (15-17) out of turn, in 4th chair. LHO declined to accept the bid and passed smoothly with a 21 count.
Yes, partner was barred and yes, I bid 3nt at my turn. Yes we were red and yes it was imps. I can think of 2000 reasons for lho's pass and none of them are on the convention card.
What is baby oil made of?
#6
Posted 2010-June-30, 22:27
Dirk Kuijt, on Jun 30 2010, 08:16 PM, said:
I certainly alter my preempting style depending on what my LHO plays. Is there some specific rule that says that an opening one bid is different?
That is also illegal. Suppose you want to play loose preempts against takeout doubles and disciplined ones against penaly doubles. I want to play penalty doubles against loose preempts and takout against disciplined ones. What happens? It is my understanding that this is why one side must decide first, and the side that acts first must commit. However, I am not a laws expert, so maybe I should not be answering.
#7
Posted 2010-July-01, 05:12
MarkDean, on Jul 1 2010, 07:27 AM, said:
Dirk Kuijt, on Jun 30 2010, 08:16 PM, said:
I certainly alter my preempting style depending on what my LHO plays. Is there some specific rule that says that an opening one bid is different?
That is also illegal. Suppose you want to play loose preempts against takeout doubles and disciplined ones against penaly doubles. I want to play penalty doubles against loose preempts and takout against disciplined ones. What happens? It is my understanding that this is why one side must decide first, and the side that acts first must commit. However, I am not a laws expert, so maybe I should not be answering.
Beat me to it...
#8
Posted 2010-July-01, 07:09
1) It has often happened to me that opps simply refuse to explain a bid, I call td, the opps say it was I who was holding up the game and i see myself in the lobby when what i really wanted to do was play bridge for the next 40 minutes.
2) I have also been thrown out of game when the tds friend complained that i did not finesse the queen, thus dropping her singleton king
So, i see myself in an environment where transfer opens, raptor no trump, ghestem are not alerted, where there are no enforceable law.
so as long as i suspect some monkey business, i pass how i please.
But i guess if I truly had to play face to face I would have to learn how to eat with fork and knife.
#9
Posted 2010-July-01, 07:58
babalu1997, on Jul 1 2010, 04:09 PM, said:
...
so as long as i suspect some monkey business, i pass how i please.
But i guess if I truly had to play face to face I would have to learn how to eat with fork and knife.
Good for you!
If there is one thing we need, its more people proudly standing up and stating
"I'm a cheat! I'm going to do my best to degrade the playing environment even more!"
#10
Posted 2010-July-01, 08:07
Quote
This would get a better response in the Laws and Rulings section but I strongly disagree.
Our preempting style varies wildly by seat, vulnerability AND the opponents methods OR style, ie. much looser non-vul against a big club system.
Our overcalling style varies similarly against a polish club or different weak notrump ranges.
Whether it's a pass or a bid, when the opponents ask it is often in the form of "What's your style in this auction" and we disclose properly.
It's a long time since I looked at it, but the WBF convention card goes into much more detail that if I remember right, caters to this type of variation.
What is baby oil made of?
#11
Posted 2010-July-01, 08:13
I'm no expert on the laws, but it seems like the only way to really make this law work would be for pairs to just not be able to look at the back of the opponent's convention card. Almost anyone is going to be influenced in style knowing that they opponents were playing Fishbein and penalty doubles of overcalls.
Indeed, if I knew that I was sitting down to play Hare Trigger and Back Stabber (who I know for being demon doublers), I'm going to pull in a bit, even if Trigger and Stabber are playing exactly the same conventions as everyone else.
As for the law you two have mentioned: which one, specifically, is it? Don't misunderstand; I am not saying you are wrong about this. I started by saying that I wasn't an expert on the laws, and many know them better than I. I'm just trying to learn here.
codo said:
eugene hung said:
#12
Posted 2010-July-01, 08:14
hrothgar, on Jul 1 2010, 02:58 PM, said:
"I'm a cheat! I'm going to do my best to degrade the playing environment even more!"
As long as Lu just varies her own style without discussing it with p (and assuming it doesn't become an implicit agreement) it is not cheating.
#13
Posted 2010-July-01, 08:35
ggwhiz, on Jun 30 2010, 09:39 PM, said:
I once opened 1nt (15-17) out of turn, in 4th chair. LHO declined to accept the bid and passed smoothly with a 21 count.
Yes, partner was barred and yes, I bid 3nt at my turn. Yes we were red and yes it was imps. I can think of 2000 reasons for lho's pass and none of them are on the convention card.
There is a flip side to your story. Ron Anderson, in your seat, would have (and did) also open NT out of turn. LHO also passed his mountain, but Ron was a reader of people and had picked up vibes from his LHO. He had a yarb, and passed it out. At least, that is the urban legend; I wasn't there.
#14
Posted 2010-July-01, 09:22
hrothgar, on Jun 30 2010, 04:48 PM, said:
This is troubling to me. If I was playing against a forcing pass system, I would want to pass with certain good hands in first seat in order to encounter the opponents' fert more frequently. Very similar to the opening poster's desire to give the opponents more opportunity to open their 8-10 NT. Both seem like reasonable defenses to the opponent's system of opening bids. I understand that this could result in an unresolvable situation: my opponents play forcing pass, I say we pass certain good hands in first seat in defense, opponents say they don't play forcing pass, I say we don't pass certain good hands in first seat, etc. But, something about not being allowed to employ what you feel are best defenses to their methods doesn't seem right.
I think there should be some regulatory consideration such that those playing certain methods give to their opponents the right to adjust opening system to counter their methods. So, things like Forcing Pass and 8-10 NTs would be designated X-systems and those employing them give to their opponents the option of adjusting their methods based upon that system or opening -- that is the opponents are allowed to have an anticipatory defense, a defense that they may use in first seat before the X-system users have had a turn to bid. (Additionally, X-system users would have to give up this right when they face other X-system users in order to avoid the unresolvable situation.)
#15
Posted 2010-July-01, 09:24
Practice Goodwill and Active Ethics
Director "Please"!
#16
Posted 2010-July-01, 09:30
George Carlin
#17
Posted 2010-July-01, 09:39
MarkDean, on Jun 30 2010, 11:27 PM, said:
Dirk Kuijt, on Jun 30 2010, 08:16 PM, said:
I certainly alter my preempting style depending on what my LHO plays. Is there some specific rule that says that an opening one bid is different?
That is also illegal. Suppose you want to play loose preempts against takeout doubles and disciplined ones against penaly doubles. I want to play penalty doubles against loose preempts and takout against disciplined ones. What happens? It is my understanding that this is why one side must decide first, and the side that acts first must commit. However, I am not a laws expert, so maybe I should not be answering.
Clearly you can alter your style of preempt or opening based on what the opponents are playing (or your feel or whatever).
Also, I like to open weak 2's a little heavy in 3rd seat, is that a problem? (you gets some nasty remarks from opps if you open a weak 2 with 13 hcp for example)
Bill
#18
Posted 2010-July-01, 09:40
Dirk Kuijt, on Jul 1 2010, 05:13 PM, said:
This is a question of local regulation rather than the "Laws"
#19
Posted 2010-July-01, 09:45
bill1157, on Jul 1 2010, 04:39 PM, said:
That is a completely different thing. Of course you can vary your style with vulnerability and seat. You can vary your 2nd seat opening style depending on the meaning of the 1st seat pass, and your 3rd seat opening style depending on the meaning of the second seat pass.
What you can't do is vary your methods depending on what defense opps are playing against them. A second seat opening is a defense against the first seat pass. So you can't vary your first seat pass depending on the meaning of opps' 2nd seat openings.
#20
Posted 2010-July-01, 09:59
helene_t, on Jul 1 2010, 10:45 AM, said:
Does that mean system regulations should be rewritten to include "defenses of first seat passes" rather than "second seat openings".

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