Posted 2018-June-04, 16:18
I'm not sure why the OP can't understand being passed in 5C. Why should North assume that South fills in the diamond suit for no losers?
I'm not saying that passing 5C is clearly correct and, as is usually the case, I cannot be objective as to what I would do were the problem presented as North's decision over 5C, with the South hand being concealed.
As it is, the auction is not easy after South doubled 4H. North should not pass it, but that's the easy part. It is far from clear what he should do, but my 'guess' (subject to the same concern about it being impossible to be objective once one knows the hand) is that North should pull to 5D.
North is expected to pass the double with all balanced hand, so this action shows shape, and it also shows at least a 2 card discrepancy between the minors. With 5-4 or such, North should bid 4N, two places to play. Note that this would NOT be a balanced hand too strong to bid 2 or 3N over 2H, since at equal one would pass and take one's 800-1400.
But what should South do over 5D? He has great diamonds and good clubs. However, might North have, for example, KQx x AJxxxx KQx? I'd argue that that particular hand is unlikely but that still doesn't make it clear for South to raise to slam.
I understand the desire to post these auctions revealing both hands, but truly believe that this rarely leads to informative discussions.
In many cases of ATB it is obvious who was at fault, and indeed there are times when I suspect that the OP was motivated by a desire to persuade partner which of them was wrong (and this attempt sometimes backfires). But when the decisions are in reality close, but the actual hands reveal the double-dummy result, then we usually end up with a lot of voices claiming that they would have got it right and assigning blame based on the outcome, not the bridge merits.
Indeed, assume North bid 5D and then one asked ATB for missing slam: I'd expect close to 100% to say 'South'. Yet had North bid this way with my example hand and had South bid to the hopeless slam, close to the same 100% would say South was at fault.
Giving the North hand as a bidding problem and then, perhaps changing the minors (in the hand and the auction) around and giving the South hand as a bidding problem a week or two later would likely generate a more objective analysis, but requires a lot of work and patience, and often has people recognizing the problem the second time, thus negating most of the utility of the approach anyway.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari