Assess blame for the failure to reach 6.
4S+6
#2
Posted 2011-August-25, 15:14
#3
Posted 2011-August-25, 15:38
Zelandakh, on 2011-August-25, 15:14, said:
Actually I figured that for a pass he could have as much as 25 ZPs. Since I held 36 ZPs that adds up to 61, which isn't enough for a small slam... so I passed.
#4
Posted 2011-August-25, 16:09
Zelandakh, on 2011-August-25, 15:14, said:
But what else does he bid ?
4♦ or 3♥ (fit) are pretty fruity on a 3 count, but will get you to a slam. You have a powerful offensive hand and partner is marked with a good hand as both opps have passed, but KJxxx, Axx, AKJ, Qx which is not impossible and you're not making 4, you haven't actually made 3 yet, partner is likely to get excited if you take an action that you might take on a stronger hand.
Should south bid on ? No he requires either the hand N has or Axxxx, xxxxx, x, xx to give him a chance, I don't think that's all that likely.
No real blame.
#5
Posted 2011-August-25, 18:15
7+5=12
subtracted from 18=6
bid 6
#6
Posted 2011-August-25, 21:07
It's pretty close if this is enough for passed hand fitjump. If N hadn't passed, I'd definitely be missing this.
#8
Posted 2011-August-26, 00:27
aguahombre, on 2011-August-25, 18:15, said:
7+5=12
subtracted from 18=6
bid 6
unlike contrived hands of LTC haters, this hand simply illustrates the power of LTC.
www.longbeachbridge.com
#9
Posted 2011-August-26, 00:31
rduran1216, on 2011-August-26, 00:27, said:
I really do hope you were joking as I was.
#10
Posted 2011-August-26, 01:01
#11
Posted 2011-August-26, 03:41
West's failure to make a passed hand double of 1♠ deserves mild censure too.
#12
Posted 2011-August-26, 03:50
aguahombre, on 2011-August-25, 18:15, said:
7+5=12
subtracted from 18=6
bid 6
LTC for advanced players almost gets you in grand slam, with all the extra trumps North sure has less than 7 losers.
#13
Posted 2011-August-26, 04:30
This more or less makes me conclude that a way over-streched splinter by North is the only way to bid it.
#14
Posted 2011-August-26, 08:33
#15
Posted 2011-August-26, 08:58
VM1973, on 2011-August-26, 08:33, said:
Yes but he also bids 4♠ with the same hand with the minors reversed where 10 tricks is the limit. Just write it off, you'll have plenty of company in 4♠.
Also, do you not wonder why very few decent players use ZAR points ?
#16
Posted 2011-August-26, 09:15
#17
Posted 2011-August-26, 09:17
"...we live off being battle-scarred veterans who manage to hate our opponents slightly more than we hate each other. -- Hamman, re: Wolff
#18
Posted 2011-August-26, 09:25
JLOGIC, on 2011-August-26, 00:17, said:
Okay so you are playing in the Bermuda Bowl against the EBU champion and since this is "Just one of those things" you bid 4♠?
the Freman, Chani from the move "Dune"
"I learned long ago, never to wrestle with a pig. You get dirty, and besides, the pig likes it."
George Bernard Shaw
#19
Posted 2011-August-26, 09:42
I think many students of the game get hooked, hopefully only temporarily, on the search for the perfect methods. Imo the fundamental problem is that the rules of bidding so constrain the number of sequences available that it becomes impossible to accurately describe all possible holdings. So it behooves a theorist to accept this and then to focus his or her efforts on maximizing the ability to bid the common hands with maximal effect and leave the freaks to some combination of judgment and luck.
Let me suggest, also, that if you spell out for any decent player an approach to bidding, that decent player will very quickly come up with hands that cause the users of that approach some difficulty. The more uncommon those hands are, the better the method. I freely admit that every method I have ever played would cause me to miss slam on this hand. But I don't care, because this hand type rarely arises. I might play 100 sessions of bridge and not see one that is comparable. In the meantime, I want to be able to maximize my performance on the vast range of hands that I can actually anticipate holding.
#20
Posted 2011-August-26, 11:33
Cyberyeti, on 2011-August-26, 08:58, said:
Also, do you not wonder why very few decent players use ZAR points ?
He might have also bid 4♠ holding:
♠108654
♥K8732
♦A
♣97
Or he might be holding:
♠10865
♥K8732
♦AK
♣97
Or the minors might have been reversed and I might have held:
♠KQJ97
♥4
♦8654
♣AK5
...and I'd be down 1 in 4♠.
OR I might be up against an inspired defense. I once kibbitzed a game where the opening lead was a diamond... ruffed. After a long thought a diamond was returned and ruffed. That might happen to me.
-----------------------------
I still think that holding more than an ace above an opening bid, I should have taken further action.