I seemed to have stirred up a hornets nest.
Obviously, lots of good players tell me its inferior to dble on the west hand, and I believe you. But if I had this hand and the spade Q as well I would dble 100% and think it wasn't close. Partner can easily have ATxxxx spade and a three diamonds. Given that, being a queen light is never that far away. The big danger here is that they dble you and you go for 500 on a nothing hand. However, this depends a lot on the quality of your opponents. Vs club players this downside virtually does not exist. I would be much less likely to bid if I knew partner could not have a weak two type hand that cannot make a F1 bid over 2d.
Its different if you play NF free bids here, and different again if you are hyper aggressive with the negative dble here.
JLOGIC, on 2012-February-06, 09:19, said:
Phil, people do not double here with a 4414 12 count lol. I get your point, but acting like doubling in this auction with a 4414 12 count is normal is crazy. Partner couldn't bid over 2D and you have already opened. I mean, this is a normal situation, it's not some rare forumy type hand.
As a side note if you are consistently taking bad actions at the table that you know are wrong then you should figure out why you're doing that. I mean deviating for state of the match/psychological reasons to exploit your opponents weaknesses is one thing, but deviating simply because you are prone to being emotional and making errors is a big flaw in your game.
ETA: It sounds like you are just undisciplined at the table if you are bidding on hands where you know it's "inferior" to bid. I really believe a large part of improving at bridge is being disciplined. For instance, bidding michaels vulnerable with that hand is just bad and will cause your partner to not know what to do ever because you are being undisciplined. I understand making errors, but again that's not like some in depth cardplay problem or slam bidding problem where you go a little bit wrong, that's just an every day situation that does not take a bunch of thought to come up with the right solution.
I 100% agree with this obviously. By far the biggest problem I have is that if I am stressed/unhappy with my RL for any reason, I will be disproportionately terrible. I have no idea if this is normal, but I no longer allow my self to make any serious RL decisions when I am unhappy, as I learnt at the bridge table quite how bad those decisions normally are. I have generally found that the difference between being happy and being sad when I play is about 2 imps a board in poor decisions.
The second problem is that I play way too much bridge where I am not really invested in the outcome. Then I play too quickly especially in the bidding, and often make bad decisions. This comes mostly from generally not having anyone on my team that I want to impress, and quite often no one who will understand that they should be impressed when you give them your line in the PM. Which, I am embarrassed to admit, is normally by biggest motivator in bridge. I am seldom that interested in winning for its own sake.
I do honestly believe that the difference between what people say on the forums and what they habitually do at the table is quite large. Sports psychologists call this "errors of execution", and I imagine that for many of us on the forums, they are the biggest obstacle. I certainly feel like they are for me. I think playing with confidence is often synonymous with making few or no errors of execution. I don't really know what one can do about this other than play more at a high level.
The physics is theoretical, but the fun is real. - Sheldon Cooper