mitsguy, on 2013-February-27, 22:44, said:
I thought that you could make a takeout double for any hand too strong for a simple overcall, even if you have only 1 suit.
Definitely not over a preempt, because over preempts your jump overcalls are *strong* not weak. There's a principle that usually applies that if RHO's action is strong, your jump is weak, (e.g. your jump overcall of a 1 bid is weak), but if RHO's bid is weak (preempt opening), a jump by you is strong. When you have ways of showing a strong one-suiter, it's better to do that rather than the auction going 2h-x-4h-4s-p-? and you don't know if partner bid it based on your presumed length or if he himself has a whole lot of spades. If the auction had gone 2h-3h-4h-4s (3H = strong one suiter looking for stopper) or 2h-4c-4h-4s or 2h-3nt-4h-4s (3nt = strong one suiter with stopper; strong balanced hands overcall 2nt or double then bid 3nt) you are in much better shape, you know he isn't counting on you having 3+ spades.
Takeout double when too strong for overcall is a tool of last resort, you usually do it only after 1 bids or with more balanced hands with at least 3 cds in unbid majors, and you try really hard not to do it with shortness in an unbid suit that partner can outbid you with. Doubling with a strong spade overcall is a lot safer than doubling with a strong diamond overcall, because you can correct partner's bids to spades on the same level. But if partner is coming with spades, you really need a moose to move since you are increasing the level as well. When you are short in the unbid major and partner bidding it at a high level after opp's jump raise is going to be problematic, you should increase your simple overcall range, bidding even on hands that are nominally too strong, because it's safer and there is a reasonably high probability that either the opponents or partner will keep the auction alive for you by bidding/showing the missing major in some way. Doubling with a strong one-suiter is mainly in fear that if you just overcall it will get all passed out while missing game; with spades this is more likely than if you are short in spades. Obviously there is some point where you are so strong you feel you must double, but don't double with 18 count and stiff spade when opps opened hearts just because your overcall range is nominally topped out at 17. And often there are alternatives available, perhaps an unusual NT call, perhaps a jump cue.
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Isn't this supposed to be the Novice / Beginner Forum?
Yeah but you are asking questions about a hand types that are kind of above that level, and in any case at some point novice/beginners have to learn what those bids they don't employ are supposed to mean, to handle these otherwise unbiddable hands.
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But none of those will show whether or not South has the K♦, which is important.
Visualize how the play goes. The K of diamonds is irrelevant. North has 7 club tricks! Presumably South has 6 spade tricks. North can win the first diamond or ruff a heart lead. Then trumps are drawn ending in dummy. Any remaining losing diamonds or hearts can then be pitched on clubs, no matter how many red cards south has. You have 6 spades, 7 clubs, diamond ace, that's 14 tricks before even any heart ruffs. Alternatively, you can think of North's diamond loser being pitched on South's fifth or sixth trump.
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I'm confused. There was another thread where someone said that he got in trouble for overcalling 1♦ over 1♣ without an appropriate hand. But you are saying that's legal? I'm confused.
There's a difference between "legal trouble", breaking the laws of bridge and being subject to rectification by the director, misbidding and getting into "bad score" trouble because you didn't have what partner thought you had, and deliberately psyching.
The guy thought it was normal to bid 1d with normal 4432 takeout double hands over 1c. That's just a misbid; if his partner raised diamonds on 3cds and they played some stupid 3-3 fit and went down a lot, that's all perfectly legal, no penalty or adjustment, but then he would have probably gotten a bad bridge result. Same if partner led diamonds expecting a better suit but would have led something more effective otherwise. So trouble, but not in the legal sense.
Now if he and his partner had the *agreement* that 1d is this hand (and not the normal usu 5+ diamonds), they are required to disclose this to the opponents that they are playing something unusual. If the opps played or defended the hand, but got a bad result because they were playing him for 5+ diamonds, they'd be entitled to an adjustment because they weren't informed. Also under some rule sets in some countries it might be deemed a disallowed convention.
But if he *psyched* 1d, deliberately deceiving both opps and partner, that's perfectly legal. The opps don't need to be informed because it's not a *partnership* agreement. But if he does this habitually with the same partner, it can become an *implied partnership agreement* subject to disclosure. Psyches = intentional misbids are fine if partner isn't in on it.
So:
- opponents must be informed about unusual *partnership agreements*, unusual meanings or strength ranges of bids.
- but you are allowed to lie about your hand if partner also will be surprised
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I'm guessing what you mean is this: If you claim to play Weak 2's, but every time you have a strong hand with diamonds open 2♠, and your partner knows that, then that is illegal.
It's illegal if you don't disclose it. It's also probably an illegal convention, because 2s = weak 2 spades or strong diamonds probably isn't on allowed convention charts in most places. It's also probably a self-destructive convention, because here you are opening 2s, partner passes it, but you were cold for 3nt or 5d. A better example would be playing 2s as a club preempt without telling the opps, but partner knows.
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But if you usually play Weak 2's, but decide, in order to ruin an opponent's chance of finding the right contract, to open 2♠ even though you have a strong hand with diamonds, and are willing to go down, then that is legal.
Yes, if you do it without partner's knowledge. But again this particular example is likely self-defeating.
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I'm also guessing that if, for example, every time your opponents bid Blackwood you bid 6♠ so that they miss their slam, then that would be illegal.
There are certain destructive conventions, like say an automatic 1s any shape/strength overcall over strong 1c, that have been barred by authorities. But I don't think this 6
♠ has been barred since it's mostly suicidal given the adjustment of non-vul doubled undertricks some years back. A few decades ago nv undertricks were 200 max, so you could make some rather ridiculous sacs esp. over grands, but they legislated that away because people like to bid and make slams. Now after the first 3 undertricks they are 300 each so this tactic is a lot less likely to bear fruit.
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But if you have an agreement and disclose it that a 6♠ overcall over opponent's Blackwood incidates a certain type of hand (maybe a hand where you'd be willing to sacrifice in spades), then it is legal to make that bid, even if you don't actually hold an appropriate hand. Am I correct?
Sure.