How to bid this hand
#1
Posted 2014-April-18, 08:56
♠ A K Q J
♥ A K Q 8 4
♦ K 8
♣ Q 4
Playing a natural bidding system, how do you plan to bid it?
#2
Posted 2014-April-18, 09:46
1. With a prime 24 count, there is too much chance that the hand with get passed out in 1♥
2. Partner will almost certainly bid 2D waiting over my 2♣ opening. I'll be able to show hearts at the two level and then show spades.
3. If partner bids 2N or 3m, we're going to slam
Expected auction
2♣ - 2♦
2♥ - 3♣
3♠ - 4♥
Maybe
2♣ - 2♦
2♥ - 3N
4N
#3
Posted 2014-April-18, 09:53
-gwnn
#4
Posted 2014-April-18, 11:02
billw55, on 2014-April-18, 09:53, said:
Kind of dumb out of context, I agree.
-P.J. Painter.
#5
Posted 2014-April-18, 11:47
#6
Posted 2014-April-18, 12:18
If opener bids 2H over 2C, would partner expect a 6-card suit? If so, would a 2nt rebid be better?
#7
Posted 2014-April-18, 12:48
NicebutDim, on 2014-April-18, 12:18, said:
If opener bids 2H over 2C, would partner expect a 6-card suit? If so, would a 2nt rebid be better?
If opener's rebid after 2♣-2♦ is 2♥, responder should assume a 5 card suit.
Quite frankly, the 2♥ rebid has been known to be made on 4 cards, typically with 4441 distribution.
On this particular hand, it would not be totally outrageous to rebid 2NT, but I would rebid 2♥.
#8
Posted 2014-April-18, 18:50
#10
Posted 2014-April-19, 02:24
NicebutDim, on 2014-April-19, 02:03, said:
It would certainly create a problem if that weakest possible response happens to be 2♥
London UK
#11
Posted 2014-April-19, 05:32
i hear it's still possible to find a fit after showing a balanced hand, but i certainly don't want to play 4h on a 53 fit. what would i be planning to ruff in dummy, my jack of spades?
#12
Posted 2014-April-19, 08:20
wank, on 2014-April-19, 05:32, said:
i hear it's still possible to find a fit after showing a balanced hand, but i certainly don't want to play 4h on a 53 fit. what would i be planning to ruff in dummy, my jack of spades?
So you want to be in 3N opposite xxx, Jxx, Qxxxx, xx ?
If you bid it as balanced it's an interesting question as to whether to show it as 4-4 or 3-5 in the majors when partner enquires.
#14
Posted 2014-April-21, 06:20
ArtK78, on 2014-April-18, 12:48, said:
That's about what I was thinking. 2NT might have more appeal if puppet is on. Although clubs could still be wide open, when 4M is making on a 7 card fit.
My guess is, OP had a disagreement with partner between these two choices.
-gwnn
#15
Posted 2014-April-21, 13:52
billw55, on 2014-April-21, 06:20, said:
My guess is, OP had a disagreement with partner between these two choices.
At the table, the auction started
2c, 2d, 2h
At this point opener has promised 10 playing tricks in hearts. Staring at my 0 count with doubleton Heart, I jump to 4H. This goes down (as does 3NT) but 4S makes on a 4-4 fit. Discussions then followed on why we weren't in this making contract.
#16
Posted 2014-April-21, 13:57
NicebutDim, on 2014-April-21, 13:52, said:
2c, 2d, 2h
At this point opener has promised 10 playing tricks in hearts. Staring at my 0 count with doubleton Heart, I jump to 4H. This goes down (as does 3NT) but 4S makes on a 4-4 fit. Discussions then followed on why we weren't in this making contract.
I think that most players would chose to rebid 3♣ showing a second negative rather than bidding a very unilateral 4♥.
After 3♣, partner would pattern out by bidding 3♠ and you (probably) have a raise to 4
#17
Posted 2014-April-21, 14:02
NicebutDim, on 2014-April-21, 13:52, said:
2c, 2d, 2h
At this point opener has promised 10 playing tricks in hearts. Staring at my 0 count with doubleton Heart, I jump to 4H. This goes down (as does 3NT) but 4S makes on a 4-4 fit. Discussions then followed on why we weren't in this making contract.
Suppose partner were 3-5-0-5 with hearts and clubs and a huge hand. What is he supposed to bid over 2♣ - 2♦? Or any 4405 hand with 5 hearts? Or, for that matter, 4531? Just because 2NT is a plausible rebid on the hand that he had doesn't mean there will not be other hands where a 2NT rebid is out of the question but his longest suit is 5 cards.
That is why it is wrong to jump to 4♥ on a doubleton. His 2♥ bid doesn't promise 6 for very practical reasons - it would make some hands totally unbiddable. Even holding some hands that partner MIGHT choose to rebid 2NT - say a 4-4-1-4 24 count with the ♦A (or even a lesser honor), partner might decide that a 2♥ rebid is a lesser misdescription of his hand than 2NT.
In other words, 4♥ might not be the best contract. Better to let partner describe his hand more fully before you leap to the 4 level.
By the way, if you reserve your 2♣ opener for hands that have 10 playing tricks (excluding hands where you intend to rebid some number of NT) you will be opening 1 of a suit on some extremely strong hands. I suggest that you lower your requirements somewhat. I am very conservative in my suit oriented opening 2♣ bids, and my requirement is basically a 3 loser hand by modified losing trick count - one loser for each card in a suit up to 3 reduced by each A, K and Q held in the suit (Q does not count for a doubleton, and K and Q do not count for a singleton). Having a 3 loser hand doesn't mean that I have 10 playing tricks. Qxx is only 2 losers by MLTC, but it is hardly worth one playing trick.
#18
Posted 2014-April-21, 14:45
NicebutDim, on 2014-April-21, 13:52, said:
2c, 2d, 2h
At this point opener has promised 10 playing tricks in hearts.
I am not convinced that this is true, absent a particular agreement with your partner.
-gwnn
#19
Posted 2014-April-21, 16:50
So I, and I think most, begin 2♣-2♦-2♥.
Because we do this, most play responder's rebid of 3♣ as conventional, showing a weak hand. If you don't want to play this "second negative" convention after the negative 2♦-2M (it's one of the oldest in bridge except for things such as blackwood and stayman) then you have to have some other agreement that would let you get out. Maybe a raise to 3♥ is passable. Or even bidding 2♠ and then (on a different hand) 3♥ might be passable, although that sounds weird.
I once played against a pair where the auction went 2♣-2♦-2♥-Pass. I turned to opener and, in my most innocent voice, asked "Do you play that as a second negative?". She had to think for a while but eventually allowed that it was. I don't recommend this approach.
Incidentally, if responder really has nothing it is not quite a slam dunk that 4♠ makes, although I gather that it did. A second negative still does not show truly nothing, maybe something like 0 to 3 highs. And the 3 won't be a king. So you will likely end in game here, it's not a lock but at least spades has a decent shot.If you stop short of game that could be right on some layouts.
#20
Posted 2014-April-22, 08:43
NicebutDim, on 2014-April-21, 13:52, said:
2c, 2d, 2h
Assuming that you and partner had not discussed such things as whether a second round minor is a double negative here and that your hand was something like 4234/4243, it would seem the logical thing to bid 2♠ now.