JLOGIC, on 2013-September-10, 03:37, said:
East has a clear 2D bid, yes you will have a high card edge but your partner is almost definitely going to lead a spade, it's pretty much a crap shoot to pass which I would expect to be -EV. On a good day he'll have a really good sequence that he's leading from, but generally I'd expect it to be bad even though we have 21 or 22 points (expecting to have more than that is quite optimistic when RHO passes, ya ya he could psyche the pass I guess but in general that won't work out well for him lol). This is especially/mainly true because we have quite a decent chance at +110 by bidding 2D so even beating them 1 is often not enough.
Save shooting it out for when you have no good suit so that 1) partner's lead does not rate to be a complete disaster and it's actually an advantage to be on lead, and 2) you have no sure fit/partscore you're gonna make anyways (and you might not get to the right one even if you do). Those things are less important than having SIX HIGH CARDS vs FOUR HIGH CARDS. I mean obv don't pass it out with a balanced 0 count but when you're in the 4-6 range you should basically always be bidding with 6-4 and passing with a balanced hand, with a 5332 I would look at my suit, obviously bid KQJxx and out but pass with 3 queens or something.
I agree.
When doubling or passing a DBL of 1NT "show values", close decisions should be resolved on lead considerations, in particular if alternative bids are available.
Points do not necessarily take tricks. Good opening leads do.
This strategy will not always lead to the best result, but it will be right far more often than basing your decision simply on counting HCP.
Under this strategy neither West should double nor East leave it in. Both had minimum values and a clear alternative to their penalty action and could not expect a safe lead for their side.
The gamble could have paid of, but in my experience it was a bad one.
Rainer Herrmann