arrows, on Sep 6 2005, 03:24 AM, said:
West leads singlton
♠, ducked to East's King, East returns a
♥, ducked again to the King. South wins the
♥ continuation in dummy and cash another
♠, then shift to
♣ and got all of the rest tricks.
West calls director, saying South should have alerted his 1NT opening bid and questioning North's 3NT bid, which is in west's opinion, not a normal choice.
N-S's convention card reads standard 15-17 1NT. and both claim they made their bids following their judgement.
What do you think?
Comment the first: I have no issue with the choice to open 1N with the South hand. Playing standard there aren't many good alternatives.
The hand is too weak to reverse.
The hand is too strong to rebid 1NT after 1
♣ - 1
♠
The hand is too strong to raise to 2
♥ after 1
♣ - 1
♥
Opening 1
♦ and rebiding 2
♣ seems to mis-describe virtually everything about the hand
Comment the second: I don't think that I would ever find a 3NT rebid at the table. The Aces suggest a suit contract. You don't have lots of slow tricks. You don't have a running Spade suit. The club suit is wide open.
Comment the third: The director's ruling was based on the "Law" that you aren't allowed to open 1NT with a singleton... Enough said.
Personally, I see no reason for an adjustment. I do consider the 3NT rebid "noteworthy". It might be amusing to use Bridge Browser to pull all of the hands where North had game forcing values with six Hearts or six Spades opposite a 1NT opening and seeing how these hands are typically bid
the bidding went:
E S W N
p 1N p 2♥
p 2♠ p 3N
p p p