BBO Discussion Forums: You bid 4H, 4D or 3NT? - BBO Discussion Forums

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You bid 4H, 4D or 3NT?

#1 User is offline   kgr 

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Posted 2004-September-26, 04:09

Scoring: IMP

Bidding goes:
1-2
3
You play 5 card Majors. 2 did promise 5 card and 10+HCP. 3 promises 6 card and 15-17 HCP.
(You also play control bids).
What do you bid now and is it obvious?
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#2 User is offline   whereagles 

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Posted 2004-September-26, 04:30

The hand lacks aces. I'm kinda endplayed into bidding 3NT now, with 4H a close contender to be bid when in need of a swing.
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#3 User is offline   flytoox 

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Posted 2004-September-26, 06:03

Yes, 4S, tell pd you have no interest in slam.
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#4 User is offline   Fluffy 

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Posted 2004-September-26, 06:08

I would bid 1NT first round.

4 is a cuebid bid
4 is cuebib bid
4 & 3NT are the only choices, I pick 4.
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#5 User is offline   luke warm 

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Posted 2004-September-26, 07:01

1) 4
2) pass
"Paul Krugman is a stupid person's idea of what a smart person sounds like." Newt Gingrich (paraphrased)
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#6 User is offline   kgr 

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Posted 2004-September-26, 09:11

Quote

4♦ is a cuebid bid
4♥ is cuebib bid

Suppose you only agreed you play cue bids without much more discussion.
I can't imagine that 4 is a cue bid.
Also is 4 a cue bid or is it only looking for best fit?
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#7 User is offline   Flame 

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Posted 2004-September-26, 09:53

kgr, on Sep 26 2004, 10:11 AM, said:

Quote

4♦ is a cuebid bid
4♥ is cuebib bid

Suppose you only agreed you play cue bids without much more discussion.
I can't imagine that 4 is a cue bid.
Also is 4 a cue bid or is it only looking for best fit?

4D is clear cue bid to me, but i wouldnt try a 4h cue bid unless we discueesed this specific bid. my choices are 4sp, 3nt, (i think i would pass at mp, but not at imp)
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#8 User is offline   han 

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Posted 2004-September-26, 10:17

I'd bid 4S, certainly not 3NT.

I would play 4D as a cuebid, but not 4H.
Please note: I am interested in boring, bog standard, 2/1.

- hrothgar
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#9 User is offline   pclayton 

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Posted 2004-September-26, 10:48

Presumably you upgraded this hand because of the fine heart suit, so I think I would trot out 4. If pard has zero tolerance for hearts and a great spade suit, he can still try 4.

I'd rather guess a major than bid 3N on this layout. This hand is very oriented to suit play.

4 is a cue bid for spades, period. As for pass; 3 really should forcing if you think about it in SAYC.
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#10 User is offline   kgr 

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Posted 2004-September-26, 11:04

The bidding actually went:
1S-2H
3S-4D
4NT- Pass
I didn't want to bid 3NT and thought I couls as well bid 4D as 4H. Partner can now support H with a doubleton.
But my partner did take 4D as a cue bid and did bid 4NT RKC. I passed this out for -3.
4H did make at the other table. (Not sure if 4S could make).
After the game I convinced partner that 4D. It could not be a cue bid because we did not yet have a fit. He agreed with this.
Do I have to go back to him now to tell him we was right anyway. :)
And: Any rules to avoid this misunderstanding. Or a url about this (when is it cue)?
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#11 User is offline   keylime 

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  Posted 2004-September-26, 11:29

3NT has to be tossed out the window. Bridge is a game of suits.

Pard doesn't have three hearts either. Why are we punishing them for being void? I'm bidding 4!s - the Jack of spades will help partner's trump suit more than my KQJxxx of hearts. That, and if pard's missing the heart ace we might be going down.
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#12 User is offline   cherdano 

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Posted 2004-September-26, 13:44

kgr, on Sep 26 2004, 05:04 PM, said:

The bidding actually went:
1S-2H
3S-4D
4NT- Pass

After the game I convinced partner that 4D. It could not be a cue bid because we did not yet have a fit. He agreed with this.
Do I have to go back to him now to tell him we was right anyway.  :ph34r:
And: Any rules to avoid this misunderstanding. Or a url about this (when is it cue)?

I think the key misunderstanding is about the 3 bid. This should show much more than extras in HCP. It should show a very good suit, that can play opposite a singleton. (I assume that 2 would be forcing, as in SAYC.) This means your that J is very good support (in context). And that opener should only bid this when he is not interested in playing in another suit.
That's why it makes sense to play 4 etc. as a cue-bid here. Then the only way to communicate "I don't want to play in spades" would be a 3NT bid.
I think the closest to a general rule for this situation is: a jump rebid in a forcing auction sets trumps.
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#13 User is offline   Chamaco 

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Posted 2004-September-26, 14:24

cherdano, on Sep 26 2004, 07:44 PM, said:

I think the key misunderstanding is about the 3 bid. This should show much more than extras in HCP. It should show a very good suit, that can play opposite a singleton. (I assume that 2 would be forcing, as in SAYC.) This means your that J is very good support (in context). And that opener should only bid this when he is not interested in playing in another suit.
That's why it makes sense to play 4 etc. as a cue-bid here. Then the only way to communicate "I don't want to play in spades" would be a 3NT bid.
I think the closest to a general rule for this situation is: a jump rebid in a forcing auction sets trumps.

Agree 100%.
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#14 User is offline   han 

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Posted 2004-September-26, 14:38

kgr, on Sep 26 2004, 12:04 PM, said:

After the game I convinced partner that 4D. It could not be a cue bid because we did not yet have a fit. He agreed with this.
Do I have to go back to him now to tell him we was right anyway.  :ph34r:
And: Any rules to avoid this misunderstanding. Or a url about this (when is it cue)?

A good rule is: a new suit at the 4-level is a cue.

An exception is when you haven't had the chance to bid the suit naturally.
Please note: I am interested in boring, bog standard, 2/1.

- hrothgar
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#15 User is offline   kgr 

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Posted 2004-September-27, 02:31

Quote

I think the key misunderstanding is about the 3♠ bid. This should show much more than extras in HCP. It should show a very good suit, that can play opposite a singleton. (I assume that 2♠ would be forcing, as in SAYC.)

2 would not be forcing for us. This shows 6 card and minimal. Is it forcing in SAYC?
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#16 User is offline   the hog 

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Posted 2004-September-27, 04:42

2H is an overbid. I would bid 1N. After 3S there are only 2 possibilities 4S and 3N. 3N is the poorer bid with this C holding. 4S for me.

(4D IS a cue bid, kqr)
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#17 User is offline   bearmum 

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Posted 2004-September-27, 06:03

kgr, on Sep 26 2004, 11:09 PM, said:

Dealer: North
Vul: None
Scoring: IMP
J
KQTxxx
KTxx
xx
 

Bidding goes:
1-2
3
You play 5 card Majors. 2 did promise 5 card and 10+HCP. 3 promises 6 card and 15-17 HCP.
(You also play control bids).
What do you bid now and is it obvious?

wow - I would not have bid 2 first time round ( I really think one NEEDS the right point count for this bid)

SO I would bid 1NT - and THEN does partner still jump to 3S with MAX 17 points??


But answering the question --- assuming the bidding I guess I will bid 4 and hopefully P will PASS :)
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#18 User is offline   EricK 

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Posted 2004-September-27, 06:12

kgr, on Sep 27 2004, 08:31 AM, said:

Quote

I think the key misunderstanding is about the 3♠ bid. This should show much more than extras in HCP. It should show a very good suit, that can play opposite a singleton. (I assume that 2♠ would be forcing, as in SAYC.)

2 would not be forcing for us. This shows 6 card and minimal. Is it forcing in SAYC?

It is forcing in SAYC because a 2/1 bid in SAYC promises a rebid unless opener bids game.

Thus SAYC is a halfway-house between "old-fashioned" systems in which opener can make a minimum non-forcing rebid and 2/1 GF systems.

This does mean that the 2/1 bids in SAYC must be kept up to strength, but it also means that opener doesn't have to jump unless he has a definite message to send.

Eric
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#19 User is offline   Flame 

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Posted 2004-September-27, 10:06

EricK, on Sep 27 2004, 07:12 AM, said:

It is forcing in SAYC because a 2/1 bid in SAYC promises a rebid unless opener bids game.

Thus SAYC is a halfway-house between "old-fashioned" systems in which opener can make a minimum non-forcing rebid and 2/1 GF systems.

I believe you know what you are saying but i wonder how many of those who play sayc know about this, i think people play 2sp as 12-14 NF 3sp as 15-17.
I remember a similar problem with 1S-2C-3C which i thought is a weak bid but people said in sayc it shows extra (actually it make sense).
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#20 User is offline   EricK 

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Posted 2004-September-27, 10:13

Flame, on Sep 27 2004, 04:06 PM, said:

EricK, on Sep 27 2004, 07:12 AM, said:

It is forcing in SAYC because a 2/1 bid in SAYC promises a rebid unless opener bids game.

Thus SAYC is a halfway-house between "old-fashioned" systems in which opener can make a minimum non-forcing rebid and 2/1 GF systems.

I believe you know what you are saying but i wonder how many of those who play sayc know about this, i think people play 2sp as 12-14 NF 3sp as 15-17.
I remember a similar problem with 1S-2C-3C which i thought is a weak bid but people said in sayc it shows extra (actually it make sense).

I imagine that most people who say they play SAYC haven't read the system description.

I imagine that most of them don't even realise there is a system description.

I imagine most of them think it just means "5 card majors, Strong NT, not many conventions", so they take the natural bidding which they are used to and change it (if necessary) to fit that mould.

In the other example you gave, the raise of a minor shows extras because it is forcing on partner as does a rebid of 2NT. This means that with a minimum hand opener must temporise with 2M.

Eric
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