MrAce, on 2015-June-23, 10:25, said:
I think I am the only one who does not see bidding 5♥ previous round as clear as others. Passing over X is interesting option in order to not push them although I don't think I'd do it.
I'm not at all sure that philKing, who made the first comment about the timing of bidding 5
♥, was advocating that action the first time around: I took his comment as pointing out that one should not do it the second time...if you were ever thinking of doing it, do it early or not at all.
I agree 100% with the notion that one doesn't give the opps two chances to describe their hands.
Personally, I would bid 4
♥ and pass.
At this heat, saving is as likely to lose imps as it is to win imps, and meanwhile bidding 5
♥ almost guarantees that we are playing doubled, which removes some possibly better outcomes.
While the opps probably have a playable fit, in diamonds if not spades, it isn't always going to be clear to the opps that they can get there. Let's assume that N doesn't hold 4 spades.....that is surely plausible on round 1 of the auction.
S's double didn't create a force on N-S, and didn't promise game values. So N, without spades, may be forced to pass. Say he has a minimum 3=2=5=3.
Turn to S. Maybe he has a 4=1=4=4. Is it clear that they will always find 5
♦ rather than defend 4
♥x'd?
Even if it is 'obvious' to onlookers that they should be in diamonds, it isn't always obvious to the players at the table, no matter how good they are.
In addition, I once saw someone make a jump overcall on xxx KJ10xxx KQx x, and now 5
♦ rates to fail!
These upsides aren't high probability chances but they weigh in the scales when we are considering an advance save that has, as it's main hope, the chances of winning 3 imps.
Btw, if they bid 5
♠ over 5
♥, I would give long odds that a competent pair will be cold for 5
♠, if not slam. Competent pairs take the money, via the double, in these auctions unless one or both have significant offensive extras.
As for the notion of passing over the double, I hate it. Why are we giving them all that bidding space on a hand on which we know that they may need to find a fit and a level? Why are we offering either of them a cheap heart cuebid at some point? Passing is an insult to the opps, and a needless one at that. If they are so bad that they screw up after a pass, why assume they will do better if we pre-empt?
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari