inquiry, on Mar 22 2007, 04:47 PM, said:
1S - 2H
3D - ?
If you don't have a natural 4NT to show extra values, clubs under control, and a willingness to go further, you will bid 3NT with a lot hands and rack up 490's and 690's rather than you slams. If you don't fit but are too strong for a quantitative 4NT, you can find a different forcing bid.
My instinct would have been that 4NT was Blackwood in support of Diamonds. Presumably you would bid 4D first here, then as that would clearly be forcing, and hope that 4N remains available next time (or that partner does not go and Blackwood on you, on a less suitable hand for the action). But I see that a natural 4NT has merit here, AND it is consistent with a simple rule (test B_), AND the blackwood hand type is at least biddable (test C_). I rather like it.
inquiry, on Mar 22 2007, 04:47 PM, said:
inquiry, on Mar 22 2007, 04:47 PM, said:
I think that there is generally a problem on misfitting hands, even in 2/1. In your examples you conveniently have a trump fit that you can express below game, and I agree that while that condition holds, the problem is much reduced. One problem with 2/1 is that there is no upper limit to the 2/1 responder. Whilst the bid is I acknowledge game forcing, that does not really show anything very special. With a real powerhouse it can still be hard to get it off your chest, as you might have done in days of yore when playing strong jump shifts. And on such hands you might have no intention of playing in NT at all, ie when responder has a self supporting suit or identifies a lack of guard opposite his singleton, so an invitational 4NT then does not enter the list of options. Even the 2/1 players have the same problems as the rest of us if responder's suit is higher ranking than opener's leading to an auction that starts with a forcing 1/1 response that could be on potentially as little as a 6 count. Responder then has to continue making forcing noises via new suits until ultimately he gets across the fact that he has a GF hand, but even that does not express the extras in reserve, and by then you are likely to be up to the level of 3NT and rather running out of alternatives.
Misfitting hands should be devalued, of course, and tend (but only tend, mind) to be appropriate for NT denomination, as well as frequently qualifying for an occasion when Quant is more useful than Black, but even then there can arise hands when you know that you should be in slam if the controls are there. If responder is balanced he would have to be so strong that the hands become so infrequent that there is not much point in catering for it. But if responder has a self-supporting suit that requires no primary support from opener then it may not be so obvious.
No-one forces us to play weak jump shifts, of course.

Help

s
t
r-m
nd
ing) tr. v. - Any bid made by bridge player with which partner disagrees.