How to find the right spot two problems in one hand
#1
Posted 2020-March-06, 02:35
Moments ago, I found myself passing 1♥ out and gaining 1.6 IMPS when I was sitting South and robot West (NSv) made 1♥+3. Here is the West hand. My first question is: What is the appropriate opening bid for West in your system? I would tend to 2NT at the moment on this hand (taking my chances that the outstanding diamonds will distribute fairly) but I'm still finding my feet. As I write, the hand was passed out at 1♥ by 7 other players. Here is the West hand.
♠AQ
♥AKJ108
♦65
♣AQJ2
One unfortunate North was human, and interposed 2♦ with this hand:
♠J1063
♥62
♦AK10872
♣10
Because of this bidding sequence that enabled West to reach 4♥:
W N E S
_ _ P P
1♥ 2♦ P 3♦
Dbl P 3♥ P
4♥ P P P
Here is the link to the full deal. https://tinyurl.com/wanrmpj
Which brings me to my second question. If North was the dealer - and even if not - does this 'minor' problem illustrate why not using a weak 2♦ bid may be a good idea?
#2
Posted 2020-March-06, 04:11
In this case, I hold Hearts and Clubs, and I am worried about the following auction
2♣ - 2♦
2♥ - 3♣
If partner bids 3!C as a second negative, there's no rebid where I feel happy
FWIW, I really hate a 2♦ overcall by North
Depending on vulnerability I'd bid 3♦ or potentially event four...
(The 4 card spade suit doesn't bother me, especially opposite a passed hand)
#3
Posted 2020-March-06, 04:21
pilowsky, on 2020-March-06, 02:35, said:
Moments ago, I found myself passing 1♥ out and gaining 1.6 IMPS when I was sitting South and robot West (NSv) made 1♥+3. Here is the West hand. My first question is: What is the appropriate opening bid for West in your system? I would tend to 2NT at the moment on this hand (taking my chances that the outstanding diamonds will distribute fairly) but I'm still finding my feet. As I write, the hand was passed out at 1♥ by 7 other players. Here is the West hand.
♠AQ
♥AKJ108
♦65
♣AQJ2
One unfortunate North was human, and interposed 2♦ with this hand:
♠J1063
♥62
♦AK10872
♣10
Because of this bidding sequence that enabled West to reach 4♥:
W N E S
_ _ P P
1♥ 2♦ P 3♦
Dbl P 3♥ P
4♥ P P P
Here is the link to the full deal. https://tinyurl.com/wanrmpj
Which brings me to my second question. If North was the dealer - and even if not - does this 'minor' problem illustrate why not using a weak 2♦ bid may be a good idea?
OK, I think there would be a split between 1♥ and 2N for the opener, at least 1♥ goes plus.
I think the 4 card spade suit put people off making the 3♦ WJO.
That said 4♥ is not a great contract, particularly when N has overcalled 2♦ as the black kings are quite likely to be wrong, but also if the spade K is wrong, you will need ♣Kx with south as you only have one dummy entry.
#4
Posted 2020-March-06, 12:26
But I can live with 1H. Especially as 2NT will likely fail.
In all cases, and not a big fan of the 2D overcall, W going alone to 4D after partner merely shows some kind of H tolerance is puzzling.
#5
Posted 2020-March-06, 12:26
But I can live with 1H. Especially as 2NT will likely fail.
In all cases, and not a big fan of the 2D overcall, W going alone to 4D after partner merely shows some kind of H tolerance is puzzling.
#6
Posted 2020-March-07, 09:44
In one of his books that I can't lay my hands on at the moment, Lawrence advises that we open the major rather than notrump when holding both a strong 5-card major and a bad doubleton.
Pavlicek recommends upgrading your hand when holding enough "Aces and Tens." Click this.
Putting these together, my auction goes
2♣ - 2♦(1)
2♥ - 4♥(2)
all pass
(1) 0-1 control count
(2) Rule of Quick Arrival
Note how clean and simple both partners make the auction for each other.
A second negative is not appropriate when holding game complement. East holds the 8's complement in opener's major and three support points -- enough for game but not enough to suggest a slam opposite a presumed minimal two-club opener.
#7
Posted 2020-March-07, 10:43
#8
Posted 2020-March-08, 04:00
Left2Right, on 2020-March-07, 09:44, said:
In one of his books that I can't lay my hands on at the moment, Lawrence advises that we open the major rather than notrump when holding both a strong 5-card major and a bad doubleton.
Pavlicek recommends upgrading your hand when holding enough "Aces and Tens." Click this.
Putting these together, my auction goes
2♣ - 2♦(1)
2♥ - 4♥(2)
all pass
(1) 0-1 control count
(2) Rule of Quick Arrival
Note how clean and simple both partners make the auction for each other.
A second negative is not appropriate when holding game complement. East holds the 8's complement in opener's major and three support points -- enough for game but not enough to suggest a slam opposite a presumed minimal two-club opener.
The only thing I would add to the above is:
I avoid NT openers when there are 2 doubletons, and,
adding 1 point for the fifth heart makes a 2C bid easy!
#9
Posted 2020-March-08, 15:53
fourdad, on 2020-March-08, 04:00, said:
I avoid NT openers when there are 2 doubletons, and,
adding 1 point for the fifth heart makes a 2C bid easy!
Depends on your agreements, we play 2♣ FG unless followed by 2N (thru kokish or not), so bidding it as a heart hand would overstate it.
#11
Posted 2020-March-08, 16:19
#12
Posted 2020-March-08, 16:31
pilowsky, on 2020-March-08, 16:19, said:
If I wanted to switch over to a method that the world had discarded 40+ years ago, Benjamin twos would not be my first choice
#15
Posted 2020-March-08, 17:16
2c is OK too. I would follow with 2NT (I play Puppet here).
Opening 2NT is not good, because it gains nothing. If partner can respond to 2nt, he likely can respond to 1h. OTOH, when you have 2 suits, 2NT can be a slam killer.
#16
Posted 2020-March-08, 18:19