ruh roh
#1
Posted 2010-August-14, 00:26
KJ5x QT8x 9xx Tx
1C 1D X P
2D P 2S P
3C P ?
At the table my LHO hitched over my double, so if this matters to you, give two answers.
#2
Posted 2010-August-14, 00:48
www.longbeachbridge.com
#3
Posted 2010-August-14, 02:09
I had 6+ with 4-4 in the majors when I doubled. Partner is content to play in 3C at least; I have the least; we play in 3C. Wow, I even got to show everyone which of my 4-card majors was the better one.
#4
Posted 2010-August-14, 02:14
aguahombre, on Aug 14 2010, 01:09 AM, said:
I had 6+ with 4-4 in the majors when I doubled. Partner is content to play in 3C at least; I have the least; we play in 3C.
I can't tell from this post if you know but 3C is forcing (not that this should necessarily prevent anyone from passing, it is a serious option IMO).
#5
Posted 2010-August-14, 06:26
I would bid 3D now. Partner went out of his way not to jump to 3C which would show a very strong hand, he cuebid and then bid. We could easily have a game or even slam at this point. LHO hitching is irrelevant to me, he might have had a diamond fit and a weak hand (in fact that seems likely to me). At the end of the day whether he thought or not he couldn't find a bid over 1D and doesn't have a very good hand.
I'm all for passing forcing bids in some auctions but this one seems crazy, we have a normal full value min and partner has game forced.
#6
Posted 2010-August-14, 06:30
I am not passing a forcing bid, I'd bid now 3♥ since 3♦ shows something in diamonds to me.
#7
Posted 2010-August-14, 07:09
Perhaps 3♣ is better played as 'almost forcing' with 2♦ then 3♦ (or 2♦ then 4♣) or a direct 3♦ available for the nuts? Give partner AKQxxxx + an ace + some secondary stuff and it is very tempting to try for 3NT with 2♦, but 5♣ is a very different thing.
Anyway, in standard I have to bid on. 3♦. I hope for a miraculous single diamond opposite so my values will carry some weight. Agree that 2♥ would have been a better bid that 2♠.
#8
Posted 2010-August-14, 08:10
#9
Posted 2010-August-14, 09:11
LHO's hitch could be based on some values and no diamond fit or a diamond fit and no values, so I don't think it tells us much. Of course, I hope for the latter, which isn't so unlikely at MP all red.
I think I would bid 3H now. AQ AKx xx AKxxxx.
#10
Posted 2010-August-14, 10:12
MFA, on Aug 14 2010, 08:09 AM, said:
Perhaps 3♣ is better played as 'almost forcing' with 2♦ then 3♦ (or 2♦ then 4♣) or a direct 3♦ available for the nuts? Give partner AKQxxxx + an ace + some secondary stuff and it is very tempting to try for 3NT with 2♦, but 5♣ is a very different thing.
Anyway, in standard I have to bid on. 3♦. I hope for a miraculous single diamond opposite so my values will carry some weight. Agree that 2♥ would have been a better bid that 2♠.
I think you should always be able to get out in 4C after trying for 3N and not having a stopper somewhere. I don't think you need to play anything fancy...you can just bid 4C and pass at some point. I would assume this with no agreements, if you have some slam try 4C bid you can surely bid something else in most auctions (but obv all auctions are not the same).
#11
Posted 2010-August-14, 11:34
cherdanno, on Aug 14 2010, 09:11 AM, said:
I think I would bid 3H now. AQ AKx xx AKxxxx.
Am clearly outvoted on whether 3C is forcing. but I still haven't seen a hand where 3C is needed as forcing after:
1C (1D) double= exactly 4-4 in majors
2D ----- 2M=no diamond stop, no 3 cards in clubs
3C (so 3C won't be passed if responder has extra strength --but can't have, opposite the examples given).
The first Quoted example has enough info to place the contract in 5c.
The second one would probably already be screwed because they opened 2NT, but might try 4H now.
#12
Posted 2010-August-14, 12:17
aguahombre, on Aug 14 2010, 07:34 PM, said:
cherdanno, on Aug 14 2010, 09:11 AM, said:
I think I would bid 3H now. AQ AKx xx AKxxxx.
Am clearly outvoted on whether 3C is forcing. but I still haven't seen a hand where 3C is needed as forcing after:
1C (1D) double= exactly 4-4 in majors
2D ----- 2M=no diamond stop, no 3 cards in clubs
3C (so 3C won't be passed if responder has extra strength --but can't have, opposite the examples given).
The first Quoted example has enough info to place the contract in 5c.
The second one would probably already be screwed because they opened 2NT, but might try 4H now.
I tend to agree with you about 3♣, hence my suggestion earlier. But there is a general metarule, at that is that 2♦ is gameforcing. I think it takes a specific partnership understanding if 3♣ is to be viewed as not completely forcing.
Btw, I suppose that a neg.dobl. can contain more than 4-4 if the hand is too weak to bid the suits in the normal fashion. That is a strong argument against having a NF 3♣, because opener might be looking for a 5-3 major fit and therefore he wants to explore and keep the bidding low even with very strong hands.
#13
Posted 2010-August-14, 16:19
#14
Posted 2010-August-14, 16:49
If double showed both majors - which is what I would think is standard without further clarification - then there seems little point in bidding a major.
In this style for me 2♦ would just be a hand too good for a limit bid in clubs so I would just bid 3♣ to show nothing further to add on the previous round.
I believe that the USA currently hold only the World Championship For People Who Still Bid Like Your Auntie Gladys - dburn
dunno how to play 4 card majors - JLOGIC
True but I know Standard American and what better reason could I have for playing Precision? - Hideous Hog
Bidding is an estimation of probabilities SJ Simon
#15
Posted 2010-August-15, 12:04
Cascade, on Aug 14 2010, 04:49 PM, said:
If double showed both majors - which is what I would think is standard without further clarification - then there seems little point in bidding a major.
In this style for me 2♦ would just be a hand too good for a limit bid in clubs so I would just bid 3♣ to show nothing further to add on the previous round.
Some people might believe 3C/2D would show something further -- a 3rd club; hence a choice of 2S or 2H after 2D. Showing better spades than hearts can't hurt. On a particular layout, opener still might want to know that the spade suit will provide side tricks or entries, whatever strain is played.
Another thought was expressed to me: that with the given distribution, responder could bid 2H with fewest HCP and 2S with slightly more, if this auction came up enough to have an agreement.
This post has been edited by aguahombre: 2010-August-15, 12:08
#16
Posted 2010-August-15, 12:16
Cascade, on Aug 14 2010, 05:49 PM, said:
If double showed both majors - which is what I would think is standard without further clarification - then there seems little point in bidding a major.
In this style for me 2♦ would just be a hand too good for a limit bid in clubs so I would just bid 3♣ to show nothing further to add on the previous round.
I would rather use 2H to show "nothing further to add" than 3C. In standard, 2D is most of the time based on a game-forcing one-suited hand, but it could also be based on another hand type (GF support for one of the majors, 18-19 balanced without a stopper). So it's important to give opener room to clarify his hand type.
#17
Posted 2010-August-15, 12:24
If partner can't bid 3NT, 4C wont be that bad of a contract.
www.longbeachbridge.com
#18
Posted 2010-August-15, 12:48
aguahombre, on Aug 16 2010, 06:04 AM, said:
Cascade, on Aug 14 2010, 04:49 PM, said:
If double showed both majors - which is what I would think is standard without further clarification - then there seems little point in bidding a major.
In this style for me 2♦ would just be a hand too good for a limit bid in clubs so I would just bid 3♣ to show nothing further to add on the previous round.
Some people might believe 3C/2D would show something further -- a 3rd club; hence a choice of 2S or 2H after 2D. Showing better spades than hearts can't hurt. On a particular layout, opener still might want to know that the spade suit will provide side tricks or entries, whatever strain is played.
Another thought was expressed to me: that with the given distribution, responder could bid 2H with fewest HCP and 2S with slightly more, if this auction came up enough to have an agreement.
I think there is a real danger if you effectively rebid your major that partner will think you have five cards there.
I believe that the USA currently hold only the World Championship For People Who Still Bid Like Your Auntie Gladys - dburn
dunno how to play 4 card majors - JLOGIC
True but I know Standard American and what better reason could I have for playing Precision? - Hideous Hog
Bidding is an estimation of probabilities SJ Simon
#19
Posted 2010-August-15, 12:57
#20
Posted 2010-August-15, 13:03
Cascade, on Aug 15 2010, 12:48 PM, said:
Ok. I thought we got past that possibility.

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