How will this hands be bid ?
#1
Posted 2019-April-15, 10:14
#2
Posted 2019-April-15, 10:40
North's 2♣ is a bare minimum 2-over-1 for us. 2NT shows 15-18 balanced (I'm valuing as near the 18). North has no reason to do anything other than raise to 3NT.
Things are lying well for 6♦ (unless a major is 6-2), but I don't think that I get there.
#3
Posted 2019-April-15, 10:42
I'm not overly surprised that folks aren't getting to slam on this one
1. The two players have a combined 25 count.
2. The reason slam is good is that the opponents AKQ of clubs and major suit queens aren't pulling full weight
3. Making slam required identifying that you are going to be able to take two major suit ruff's in the North hand
I can give you a relay auction that will trivially find this slam, however, even here you need some real optimism to bypass 3N and search for those magic aces.
Doubt you're going to see this happen for pairs playing more natural methods.
#4
Posted 2019-April-15, 10:49
msjennifer, on 2019-April-15, 10:14, said:
I doubt that even a strong club pair would reach this magic contract, and I can't imagine how any pair playing standard or 2/1 would even sniff at it.
1D 1N is normal, and now South really has no call other than a conservative 2N (easily raised to game by North) or an aggressive 3N, easily passed by North.
3D is an option that might occur to some players, but I think it is misguided after the 1N response. While we have a stiff club, partner usually has club length and often some club strength for 1N, since he lacks a 4 card major and did not raise diamonds. Finally, the opps are most likely going to lead a major on such an auction. Of course, 3D is hardly going to get North to do anything other than 3N. Make South Kx Kxx (or Kxx Kx) in the majors, with Qx or worse in clubs (so an 18 count...heck, make it KQ Kxx AKQJxx Qx: a 20 count) and bidding any slam is silly.
Even the big club players are likely to have problems, especially if North shows a positive response with clubs: that is going to steer South, who has minimal hcp and a misfit, towards the 'obvious' 3N, in due course.
One has to understand that bidding will never be a completely accurate, precise science. The closest one is likely to come is to use a complex relay method, but relay methods have their limitations on hands on which neither partner has extras such that one of them can institute the relay, and get the requisite information at a safe level.
If one starts distorting one's methods so as to make bidding 6D plausible, one is almost surely going to have a lot of problems on less magical fits.
#5
Posted 2019-April-15, 10:55
Tramticket, on 2019-April-15, 10:40, said:
#6
Posted 2019-April-15, 11:36
My auction would be:
1♦ - 1NT - 3NT
#7
Posted 2019-April-15, 11:47
Playing a strong club without relays. I probably still won't have the stomach to find the two doubletons so won't find 6♦.
#10
Posted 2019-April-15, 12:52
#11
Posted 2019-April-15, 20:04
"Learn from the mistakes of others. You won't live long enough to make them all yourself."
"One advantage of bad bidding is that you get practice at playing atrocious contracts."
-Alfred Sheinwold
#13
Posted 2019-April-16, 03:09
chasetb, on 2019-April-15, 20:04, said:
At what level do you find out min 2236 with 4 controls, because if you can establish the fact that his controls are not in clubs you know the slam is great.
#14
Posted 2019-April-16, 07:32
#15
Posted 2019-April-16, 08:05
msjennifer, on 2019-April-16, 07:32, said:
This is the year 2019...
#16
Posted 2019-April-16, 09:18
msjennifer, on 2019-April-16, 07:32, said:
Italian 4-card majors employs strong 2 openings, but this hand does not meet the requirements either for hcp or losing tricks.
Nor are responder's clubs good enough to show at 3 level over a strong 2 opening.
Maybe with ACOL it would be different.
#18
Posted 2019-April-16, 12:13
#19
Posted 2019-April-16, 12:47
2/1 needs to be combined with a forcing 1nt to work. There is no such thing when you open a minor.
The hand here is a standard 1nt response.
#20
Posted 2019-April-16, 14:21
1♦-1N
3♦.
Unless South would tend to rebid NT instead of 3♦ with both major suits stopped, I think North can almost expect partner to have a singleton club given opps' silence. But then 6♦ is probably good if partner (South) also has enough key cards. So at IMPs, maybe
1♦-1N
3♦-4♦
4N-5♥
6♦-P
?
MsJeniffer's deal is of the kind that authorities might flag in an effort to diagnose and prosecute collusive cheating.
Bidding double-dummy, cheats might well reach 6♦
Admittedly, rarely, a lucky innocent pair might also bid and make the slam.
But evidence of consistent success on such flagged deals, would corroborate cheating suspicions.