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3 little pigs

#1 User is offline   jillybean 

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Posted 2021-March-26, 01:19



MP's, 2/1 2 and 2 would be GF

What! do you bid?
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#2 User is offline   pilowsky 

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Posted 2021-March-26, 01:35

1NT not forcing over an opening of 1 minor using 2/1
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#3 User is offline   Douglas43 

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Posted 2021-March-26, 01:51

1NT. Even if not playing 2/1 this wouldn't qualify for a two-level response in a new suit.
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#4 User is offline   mycroft 

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Posted 2021-March-26, 10:15

What's my NT range?

If it's 12-14 (and it likely is given previous threads), then you have the K/S problem of what to do with hands that would invite opposite the strong NT[1]. K/S solves this by making 1m-1NT 5-7 (KSU - balanced 8). They overload the 2 call with hands like this (if you think it's too strong for "balanced 8"), and have a whole big pattern to resolve it (B-18 through B20 in K/S Updated. Note the header to B-19: 1-2 "shows exactly the same hands as" 1-1).

If it's 15-17, 1NT. No thought required.

[1] And yet again, I get trapped wishing for a single-character-width ten. 3=3=3=5 felt wrong, but I couldn't figure out why for a bit.
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#5 User is offline   Cyberyeti 

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Posted 2021-March-26, 10:28

1N almost whatever I'm playing, VERY old style Acol would 2/1 on this but gave up on it a long time ago.
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#6 User is offline   jillybean 

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Posted 2021-March-26, 11:11

I did not think this would be a good hand to play in 1nt and I didn't want to end the auction, so I chose 1.
I'm comfortable if partner raises , I'm delighted if he rebids a minor and I think he is better positioned to play in 1nt.




Needless to say, the director was called when dummy came down.
I'm not sure if I have the auction 100%, north bid after the X, south never mentioned
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#7 User is offline   AL78 

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Posted 2021-March-26, 11:45

Why did you make a decision that the final contract was going to end up in a doomed NT level? I don't think it is a good idea to warp your hand so early in the auction when you know little of what partner has. I'm a believer in bidding according to what you have in your hand with few exceptions.

As for the director call, I assume the verdict was hard luck, you got stuffed by a psyche.
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#8 User is offline   AL78 

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Posted 2021-March-26, 11:48

Nice hand to have at IMPs, a double game swing potentially.
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#9 User is offline   TylerE 

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Posted 2021-March-26, 11:56

Sorry, but bidding 1S is just a horrible bid. Stop trying to overthink everything. You should DELIGHT at bidding 1N. You want the lead coming to your hand.
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Posted 2021-March-26, 12:11

View PostAL78, on 2021-March-26, 11:45, said:

As for the director call, I assume the verdict was hard luck, you got stuffed by a psyche.

Or a lesson for S that 2S « cue-bid » over 1S is (most often played as) natural, good opening hand with a 6-cd suit. Here the extra length compensates.

And E probably owes W a raise to 3C.
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#11 User is offline   mycroft 

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Posted 2021-March-26, 12:42

I'm just having a discussion with my partner about 1-p-1-2 is natural. Because people will do this. Much better than a director call, for all sides.

Also, why pass 2? You have an "almost invite" hand, you have a double fit and a source of tricks in NT, partner could be 17 here. I know, you're concerned you've shown a spade stopper and if partner bids 3NT you'll lose the first 5 (or 7) spades.
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#12 User is offline   jillybean 

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Posted 2021-March-26, 12:58

View PostAL78, on 2021-March-26, 11:45, said:

Why did you make a decision that the final contract was going to end up in a doomed NT level? I don't think it is a good idea to warp your hand so early in the auction when you know little of what partner has. I'm a believer in bidding according to what you have in your hand with few exceptions.

As for the director call, I assume the verdict was hard luck, you got stuffed by a psyche.

I did not make any decision the final contract was going to end in a doomed nt, I didn't like the idea of bidding 1nt when I have 8 cards in the minors and no major cards. I want to the keep the auction alive, I think partner is more likely to bid again over 1 with a misfit than he is over 1nt, if he bids nt we have a stopper and will play there. (edited)

I'm happy for you to call the 1 bid bad, terrible, ghastly but it is not a psyche.
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#13 User is offline   jillybean 

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Posted 2021-March-26, 12:59

View Postmycroft, on 2021-March-26, 12:42, said:

I'm just having a discussion with my partner about 1-p-1-2 is natural. Because people will do this. Much better than a director call, for all sides.

Also, why pass 2? You have an "almost invite" hand, you have a double fit and a source of tricks in NT, partner could be 17 here. I know, you're concerned you've shown a spade stopper and if partner bids 3NT you'll lose the first 5 (or 7) spades.

I think I have the auction wrong, I did raise clubs and then partner passed the double. If partner bids 3nt we will play in a minor.
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#14 User is offline   TylerE 

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Posted 2021-March-26, 13:04

View Postjillybean, on 2021-March-26, 12:58, said:

I'm happy for you to call the 1 bid bad, terrible, ghastly but it is not a psyche.


If that isn't a psyche, I don't know what is. You don't want to play in spades, you don't want a spade lead.
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#15 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2021-March-26, 13:12

This is how partnerships end. It is impossible to know where this hand belongs after 1 bid so for partnership unity and trust bid your hand normally, I.e., 1nt
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#16 User is offline   jillybean 

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Posted 2021-March-26, 13:17

View PostTylerE, on 2021-March-26, 13:04, said:

If that isn't a psyche, I don't know what is. You don't want to play in spades, you don't want a spade lead.

Psyche "A deliberate and gross misstatement of honor strength or suit length."
I would be surprised if 3 card when 4 cards are expected would be considered a gross missstement of suit length.
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#17 User is offline   AL78 

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Posted 2021-March-26, 13:43

View Postjillybean, on 2021-March-26, 12:58, said:

I did not make any decision the final contract was going to end in a doomed nt, I didn't like the idea of bidding 1nt when I have 8 cards in the minors and no major cards. I want to the keep the auction alive, I think partner is more likely to bid again over 1 with a misfit than he is over 1nt, if he bids nt we have a stopper and will play there. (edited)

I'm happy for you to call the 1 bid bad, terrible, ghastly but it is not a psyche.


From the perspective of the opponents it is a psyche, and on this board had the same effect as a successful psyche, whatever you want to call it.
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#18 User is offline   AL78 

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Posted 2021-March-26, 13:45

View Postjillybean, on 2021-March-26, 13:17, said:

Psyche "A deliberate and gross misstatement of honor strength or suit length."
I would be surprised if 3 card when 4 cards are expected would be considered a gross missstement of suit length.


Yes it is when you are bidding the suit naturally to suggest it as a possible strain to play in. It makes a big difference when the opponents want to get into the auction. The competitive part of the system over 1S natural is going to be different to over 1S could be three.
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#19 User is offline   mikeh 

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Posted 2021-March-26, 13:51

1S on this hand is a psyche.

It’s also a dangerous psyche in that in most standard based methods opener is permitted to raise with a shapely minimum and 3 card support. He’s also going to jump raise, to 3 or 4S, or splinter on hands on which you’re going to deeply regret your call. Or he bids 3N and your LHO doubles for the lead, and you’re cold for a minor contract, down in 3N off the top.

Meanwhile, 1N does an admirable job of telling partner that you have no 4 card major, no diamond raise, and roughly your actual hcp.

Is it ideal? Well, you may wrongside notrump on occasion but right-siding is, imo, a seriously overrated concern when the opps are passing. It’s a legitimate concern in constructive auctions, but distorting one’s hand to avoid a normal, descriptive call out of a fear of having the wrong hand declare is way too much.

Obviously south has a trivial 2S overcall....nobody should play this as anything but natural...not to cater to xxx but because often 2S plays just fine when you know about the break, and most partnerships struggle against 2S here. What, for example, does double show?

It’s important to stay within your methods. When your methods say to bid 1N, bid 1N.

The allure of masterminding, which is what 1S is, can be pernicious. Masterminding is choosing actions based upon your personal belief, on a given hand, that you know the layout of the hand even when you don’t. Here, you’ve convinced yourself that notrump will play poorly from your side.

It’s refusing to abide by your chosen methods out of a conviction that one knows better. It’s a slippery slope, made all the worse by the occasional triumph. Meanwhile, you’re damaging your partnership.
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#20 User is offline   mycroft 

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Posted 2021-March-26, 13:59

if you don't think it's a psychic, then you think it's a reasonable deviation from your system. If your partner also thinks so, then it's part of your actual, if implied agreement. If it is your agreement, then it has to be legal in the game you're playing. From what I can read of the NZB systems regulations, that's not an issue, but don't trust me for that. And the opponents have to be as aware as you are about it.

It's much better for you that a "deliberate, gross" deviation from your methods be considered a psychic. And a "four card suit" on 654 and a doubleton - yeah, to me that's gross. You've already volunteered deliberate.

You're not the first to want to bid a 3-card major on the odd hand that is unsuitable for anything else in your system. My experience with pairs who do this (not exclusively, but pretty much) is that:
  • "It's normal, everybody would do it, why do we have to tell the opponents?", or
  • "It's very rare, and everybody has some hands that system doesn't have a bid for, why do we have to say anything?" (or better yet, "it's just bridge"); and
  • "But of course it's not psychic, I don't psych!"

Now, I am 100% biased; in the ACBL, an agreement to respond in a 3-card major was not legal in 95% of events until 2017 (and still isn't, on the Basic charts). And we have the "Thanks for the Bulletin's clever" attitude to psychic bidding by most players. So the people who would do this (or designed their system to require this) were in a bind, where what they wanted to play wasn't legal, but they couldn't claim it was a psychic (even if it was), because then they'd be tarred and feathered. More enlightened places in the world might see different patterns.

If I did this (and partner wouldn't expect it!), partner's response would be 4 splinter. But that never seems to happen to anyone else.

As far as the opponents are concerned, if they can't resolve a psychic 1M response either immediately or later, maybe they should look into fixing that, or paying off to it when it happens, depending on the relative EV.
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