Please Explain this bidding
#1
Posted 2020-May-07, 09:33
#2
Posted 2020-May-07, 11:08
1H-3H by opener shows a better hand than 1H-2H, long hearts in either sequence, but it's not as strong (nor game-forcing for some/most) as say 1H-3C would be. Responder bid 1S in response and decided that they knew enough to bid grand, perhaps that was a stupid decision that happened to work, or perhaps they can simply count enough tricks.
Good contracts don't always make, you'll do better playing contracts with good play, for a grand slam that is usually somewhere around 75%-80% chance of making for most. Perhaps they simply thought those odds were likely at this point and couldn't imagine not playing grand, and decided to forego the dog and pony show of ace asking sequences. I'd assume responder was holding a hand full of keycards.
#3
Posted 2020-May-07, 11:30
#4
Posted 2020-May-07, 16:29
It looks like a bad bid that got lucky. Neither bid from East is going to get much support from a bidding panel.
#5
Posted 2020-May-07, 17:10
sfi, on 2020-May-07, 16:29, said:
It looks like a bad bid that got lucky. Neither bid from East is going to get much support from a bidding panel.
Agreed, you should bid a grand I think anyway, but which one ? there are cases for 7♣/7♥/7N, but E's 2 bids are unbelievable, he deserved to catch KQ, AJ109xxx, Qxx, A
#6
Posted 2020-May-08, 02:49
Cyberyeti, on 2020-May-07, 17:10, said:
And we hope they did not have a wire on the board- perhaps they were just shooting for a top?
#7
Posted 2020-May-08, 05:35
#9
Posted 2020-May-08, 07:11
West made a slight overbid
East took a chance and it paid off
#11
Posted 2020-May-08, 09:49
There are also some tournaments I heard of in which each pair can only make 4 bids on each board, in which the same would occur
#12
Posted 2020-May-08, 09:58
Cyberyeti, on 2020-May-08, 07:53, said:
Ever heard the expression MAFIA (Majors Always First In Answering)?
1♠ would not be my choice playing standard methods, however, its hardly the worst bid that I have ever seen
#14
Posted 2020-May-08, 12:57
I would delay the game slightly, by responding 2!c, which shows 10 points and at least 4 clubs.
When my partner rebids 3!h, then I can start to guess what they have. With my 19 HCP and partner's expected 15+ HCP, then I can 'see' at least 34 HCP, and at least a 7-card heart fit.
What is my partner's distribution? With at least 6 hearts, they have 7 other cards. I need to check if I can protect those losers? I can estimate 2 losers in my hand. I would need to know if they have the Aces and King of Hearts. I would expect losers to go on the clubs.
So, in an ordinary tournament I would go to RKCB based on 1430 answers. With the right answers, then I would be looking for 7nt.
However, this concept of speedball is the issue here. I have not played in such a tournament but can imagine that speed is of the essence. In Goulash competitions, the regular players create a particular method of bidding to match the type of hands to expect. I can imagine that playing at speed would need such a system to manage the speed.
At speed, perhaps the majority would go for 6!h, and so to ensure a win, perhaps a bid at the 7 level is necessary.
Wish you could ask the bidders as it would be useful to know their thinking.
Keep safe
#15
Posted 2020-May-08, 13:57
MP7601, on 2020-May-08, 09:49, said:
There are also some tournaments I heard of in which each pair can only make 4 bids on each board, in which the same would occur
That is a Christmas party sort of thing though.
#17
Posted 2020-May-09, 02:59
I wasn't playing this, only kibitzing. As the cards lay, North made ten tricks without difficulty after hearts split 3-1. E later explained that X was for takeout, but W obviously thought different!
Thing is, third seat after two passes, I would never have opened 4♥ on that hand. With the 6-5-1-1 to help, it's good enough for 1♥. The bidding would have probably reached 4♥ anyway, but E would have been unlikely to double - even though they had two AK's.
But maybe I'm wrong?
#18
Posted 2020-May-09, 03:19
661_Pete, on 2020-May-09, 02:59, said:
I wasn't playing this, only kibitzing. As the cards lay, North made ten tricks without difficulty after hearts split 3-1. E later explained that X was for takeout, but W obviously thought different!
Thing is, third seat after two passes, I would never have opened 4♥ on that hand. With the 6-5-1-1 to help, it's good enough for 1♥. The bidding would have probably reached 4♥ anyway, but E would have been unlikely to double - even though they had two AK's.
But maybe I'm wrong?
One of the better players in my area has long championed this type of bid, it's not crazy, and particularly against not great opps you will be playing 4♥ rather than defending 4♠ much more of the time if you get there in one go.
#19
Posted 2020-May-09, 05:16
661_Pete, on 2020-May-09, 02:59, said:
Sour grapes
Plenty of good players will gamble in third seat.
Paul Marston used to advocate that 7-4 hands get opened either 4M / 5m under the theory that the auction is going to get crazy and you might as well force a guess on the opponents...