what to open here
#21
Posted 2005-March-17, 02:50
#22
Posted 2005-March-17, 02:53
#23
Posted 2005-March-17, 02:54
geofspa, on Mar 17 2005, 06:44 AM, said:
What if anything should partner do holding this hand on hearing 4♠
Sitting North
NS White
EW Red
Dealer South
Bidding so far
4♠p?
Please comment
It would be easy to say "keep the bidding alive", after seeing both hands.
Without seeing both hands, though, the answer can be based only on the style of the preemptor.
1) Do you play Namyats ?
If yes, then 4S is a bad preempt and there is not much hope for slam.
BTW, I agree with Phil that this hand resembles more a 1st seat Namyats than anything else.
2) In your pship, how bad can be a first seat preempt white vs red ?
I would bid 4S with JT9xxxxx and nothing else on the side, or occasionally with a 7 bagger + a side void.
If there is a substantial chance that pard has preempted with very little, then this hand has very little hope for slam, because it has many losers to cover.
Yes, you might construct the perfect hand, with the right unsupported honors or shortness to cover ♣ and ♥.
But you might find unsupported honors in diamonds as well, and/or being missing the trump Ace or simply finding partner with spade values only.
So I'd pass and accept the occasional minus if slam is there.
It is a risk that the 4S opener chose to accept when he decided to open 4S.
#24
Posted 2005-March-17, 04:29
♠K, ♥A, ♣A, at least one diamond ruff (good chance that partner has more than 2 diamonds though), and if not, there is always the club finesse(s). Since I have all side suits stopped, there is no need to cue. If I get 1 Key Card, slam is surely with the odds. No ♠Q needed, because we have 11+ trumps.
Yes, I know, heart lead through dummy's ace, and I am on a guess. Let it ride or set up clubs. That will depend on my LHO. Is (s)he known never to lead away from a king against a slam, or does (s)he usually prefer aggressive leads. I can't tell unless I am at the table to see if I know him/her and determine what his/her style is. On the internet it makes life more difficult.
A priori it's obviously with the odds to play low from dummy, because you need more than a bit of luck to get clubs going for 2 heart pitches.
Roland
#25
Posted 2005-March-17, 04:36
However I have no problem with 4♠ on this:
QJxxxxxx
xx
xx
x
and 5♠-1 will look silly.
I don't really like 1♠ either and see your problem, Roland. I'd rather open 4♦ but the poster did not say if this was part of the system so I assumed it was not.
#26
Posted 2005-March-17, 04:41
Gerben42, on Mar 17 2005, 10:36 AM, said:
However I have no problem with 4♠ on this:
QJxxxxxx
xx
xx
x
and 5♠-1 will look silly.
I don't really like 1♠ either and see your problem, Roland. I'd rather open 4♦ but the poster did not say if this was part of the system so I assumed it was not.
Ditto
#27
Posted 2005-March-17, 04:44
Gerben42, on Mar 17 2005, 05:36 AM, said:
QJxxxxxx
xx
xx
x
I have a problem bidding 4♠ with that hand. I think 4-level pre-empts should be disciplined (yes, it's been a long time since I was a junior). This hand is one trick short, or has one loser too many if you like.
But as we well know, we have the 2-3-junior pre-empt rule. If 4♠ can have any number of losers, it's impossible for responder to judge.
Roland
#28
Posted 2005-March-17, 06:27
If 4♠ can be on junk you should pass with the actual responding hand and if 4♠ is not on junk you should make another move.
Regular partnerships talk so much about convention this and convention that, but not about these kinds of things. It is so important to DISCUSS a preempting style and stick to it. This is the problem with the initial question.
Do I open 4♠ on this hand? Well, I don't know, it depends on your partnership style.
DISCUSS what a weak two looks like. And a weak three. And a game level preempt. What about Namyats? If you play that what do you do with a 4minor preempt?
The short version of my style is this:
Vulnerable: You can take it to the bank. 3-level preempts should be on 7 cards with 2 of the top 3. 4-level preempts have 8 tricks.
No one vulnerable: 3 tricks short
Favorable: 4 tricks short
#29
Posted 2005-March-17, 06:38
Gerben47, on Mar 17 2005, 07:27 AM, said:
Favorable: 4 tricks short
Yes, a very disciplined junior style I must say. By the way, I agree with all you are saying about partnership discussions. Many want to add zillion of new conventions before they have been through all the basic stuff.
Roland
#30
Posted 2005-March-17, 07:49
#31
Posted 2005-March-17, 08:18
Roland
#32
Posted 2005-March-17, 08:45
To me 4♠ is only justified, if the hand could also be opened at 1 level.
(This 4♠ is allowed to open since the rule of 18 applies.)
I cover partners looser in ♠, ♣ and ♥ and I'm short in ♦.
Since we have at least a 10 card fit, opps will have a fit too and it's almost sure it's ♦.
So i guess 5♠ is makeable., and my main iterest is partners tump quality.
This is why i bid 5♠, partner should advance to 6 it he holds AQ.
#33
Posted 2005-March-17, 10:37
geofspa, on Mar 17 2005, 01:44 AM, said:
What if anything should partner do holding this hand on hearing 4♠
|
|
Sitting North
NS White
EW Red
Dealer South
Bidding so far
4♠p?
Please comment
4nt, blackwood, must admit I would never pass here.
Will allow for p to have 8 spades to the nothing and expect no outside aces and very seldom outside kings. So we may be off 2 aces. Of course will bid 6 if they show ace of spades.
#34
Posted 2005-March-17, 14:39
Bidding at table
.W....N....E....S
...................1♠
2♦...3♦...P...4♠
all pass
So this is the full hand.
I would like to see some comments on all aspects of bidding here please.
#35
Posted 2005-March-17, 15:37
geofspa, on Mar 17 2005, 04:39 PM, said:
Bidding at table
.W....N....E....S
...................1♠
2♦...3♦...P...4♠
all pass
So this is the full hand.
I would like to see some comments on all aspects of bidding here please.
There are a few little points to consider, most covered already by others.
OPENING BID
1) Is south too good for a preempt to 4♠. The too good issue revolves around two issues. How do you play your NOT VUL versus VUL preempts. Your hand rates to take 7 tricks opposite a bust (4♠ down three). In some circles, rule of 2 or 3 applies (non-vul preempt, you are within three of your preempt, vulnerable you are within 2 of your preempt). This rule has been relaxed, and really relaxed by some at these colors. I think a preempt at these colors can include down three or more (never less).
2) The second issue, is can you open namyats with this hand. This depends upon your agreement for such a bid. This hand falls outside my requirements for namyats.
3) Finally can you "lower" the requirement and open this hand 1♠. Well, if you are a ZAR point counter, this is well more than a minimum opening bid. I certainly think this hand has the "value" for an opening 1♠ bid, but I would have choosen a 4♠bid.
RESPONDERS FIRST BID
Over 2♦, responder has four reasonable choices.
- 3D = cue-bid, setting game force as at your table
- 4D - splinter, settting spades as trumps
- 3C - forcing, planning on showing spade support later
- 4C = fit jump, showing clubs and spades, and values for at least game
I have to admit I would have jumped to 4♣ and gotten the best three features of my hand across to partner at the very first opportunity. This would show 1) Game value, 2) Fair to good club suit, and 3) Spade support. I can't imagine why you would consider any other bid (well, you may not play fit jumps in competition, but you should).
Openers Rebid
No doubt opener wanted to use priniciple of fast arrival to show spades and a weak hand. It is not clear if you played 3♦ as general force or if that promised spade support, as opener bid the same way, either way. It seems to me, if you open 1♠ you did so because you imagined slam chances. Your partner cue-bid at the three level and you are signing off. This seems odd to me. Opener probably should rebid 3♠ to see what responder had in mind, or cue-bid 4♦ denying club or heart control and see what happens next.
On my preferred auction, opener would cue-bid 4♦ over responders fit jump to 4♣. This is likely to propel you to the 6♠ contract you envisoned when you opened 1♠, which on this layout will make without a heart lead, and you are unlikely to get a heart lead as well.
How would I bid this hand? I would open 1♠ because I am not vulnerable and I am willing to outbid the opponents, if I feel it necessary. The diamond void might even doom any slam they bid over a potential 5♠ contract I might bid. At these colors, my first seat preempts are nowhere near this strong, so I can't afford to open 4♠ given the vulnerability. Reverse my majors, and I have to open 4♥. Or change to both not vul, or both vul, and I would open 4♠, as my partner would expect more in these cases for my preempt.
Ben
#36 Guest_Jlall_*
Posted 2005-March-18, 00:19
inquiry, on Mar 17 2005, 04:37 PM, said:
Ben plays them better than me, im sure on the DA lead i would pull trump, hook a club, and when that fails play ace of clubs and go down.
On a side note, did east really never bid? rofl.
#37
Posted 2005-March-18, 01:16
Jlall, on Mar 18 2005, 06:19 AM, said:
I think you are right, in the sense that Ben plays them better
Pull trump, then double finesse to the 10 in ♣ looks best, doesn't it? (single-dummy, i mean of course) Makes unless East has both ♣KJ (any length), or ♣J tight, if I am not mistaken. Even then, you have an extra chance when you guess right on his heart return.
Arend
#38
Posted 2005-March-18, 05:36
#39
Posted 2005-March-18, 07:02
Those who asked what is the problem just faced why 1♠ opening has advantages.
After 4♠ I will bid 6♠ if we are vulnerable, or anything followed by 6♠, I can count 7♠, 1♦ ruff 2 aces for 10 tricks, and chances of extra tricks are ♣Q, a third ♦, 8th ♠, or 5th♣, all of them are likelly to come.
If we are not vulnerable I will bid 4NT just in case.
#40
Posted 2005-March-18, 07:35
If the latter I explain that I normally do not hold an 8-card suit and we do not have agreements about 1-bids and 8-card suits.

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