IS N overcall of 2♠correct orshould he have bid 1 ♠?
north's bid correct bid
#2
Posted 2021-December-19, 06:51
If the fourth heart were a small diamond this would be a picture perfect 2♠ bid. And a single flaw is perfectly acceptable for a preempt, so 2♠ is still a very accurate bid. But I like 1♠ even more. That being said, you do need good agreements to slam the brakes if partner gets all enthusiastic after hearing 2♥ if you bid both suits. Without agreements to that effect 2♠ is probably the percentage bid.
#3
Posted 2021-December-19, 09:55
DavidKok, on 2021-December-19, 06:51, said:
If the fourth heart were a small diamond this would be a picture perfect 2♠ bid. And a single flaw is perfectly acceptable for a preempt, so 2♠ is still a very accurate bid. But I like 1♠ even more. That being said, you do need good agreements to slam the brakes if partner gets all enthusiastic after hearing 2♥ if you bid both suits. Without agreements to that effect 2♠ is probably the percentage bid.
Good summary by David. Despite the gappy spades, I'd bid 2♠ and apologise if we miss 4♥
#4
Posted 2021-December-19, 09:57
DavidKok, on 2021-December-19, 06:51, said:
If the fourth heart were a small diamond this would be a picture perfect 2♠ bid. And a single flaw is perfectly acceptable for a preempt, so 2♠ is still a very accurate bid. But I like 1♠ even more. That being said, you do need good agreements to slam the brakes if partner gets all enthusiastic after hearing 2♥ if you bid both suits. Without agreements to that effect 2♠ is probably the percentage bid.
I agree with David. Good summary. I like to pre-empt so would bid 2♠ and apologise if I'm wrong
#5
Posted 2021-December-20, 11:40
But I take a lot of liberties opposite passed hands - both weak and strong. More than most I would expect.
I expect if hearts plays better, it's 2♥ vs 2♠, not 4; and 2♠ might just win the battle in ways that 1♠, then 2♥ after they find their fit at the 2 level, won't.
[*]The "play in the 4-4 rather than the 5-4" is because you can get a pitch. In an 18-HCP game contract, the chance you get that pitch before they take the tricks is somewhat lower than in the 32-HCP slam.
#6
Posted 2021-December-20, 14:17
#7
Posted 2021-December-21, 03:43
Winstonm, on 2021-December-20, 14:17, said:
yes, partner passing makes 2S a lot more attractive.
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#8
Posted 2021-December-21, 05:10
mycroft, on 2021-December-20, 11:40, said:
But I take a lot of liberties opposite passed hands - both weak and strong. More than most I would expect.
I expect if hearts plays better, it's 2♥ vs 2♠, not 4; and 2♠ might just win the battle in ways that 1♠, then 2♥ after they find their fit at the 2 level, won't.
[*]The "play in the 4-4 rather than the 5-4" is because you can get a pitch. In an 18-HCP game contract, the chance you get that pitch before they take the tricks is somewhat lower than in the 32-HCP slam.
Quite. I would not bid 2♠ opposite an unpassed hand.
#10
Posted 2021-December-21, 08:01
mycroft, on 2021-December-20, 11:40, said:
But I take a lot of liberties opposite passed hands - both weak and strong. More than most I would expect.
I expect if hearts plays better, it's 2♥ vs 2♠, not 4; and 2♠ might just win the battle in ways that 1♠, then 2♥ after they find their fit at the 2 level, won't.
[*]The "play in the 4-4 rather than the 5-4" is because you can get a pitch. In an 18-HCP game contract, the chance you get that pitch before they take the tricks is somewhat lower than in the 32-HCP slam.
The most likely reason 4♥ makes and 4♠ doesn't would be that you're off a heart ruff in spades, but not a spade ruff in hearts (do you open Ax, Qxxxxx, Ax, xxx ?) but yes it's a pretty small target, auto 2♠ for us.
#11
Posted 2021-December-21, 08:57
P_Marlowe, on 2021-December-21, 03:43, said:
Not only parter but your LHO could not open and 2S forces a call at the 3-level which may be too rich for that hand.
#12
Posted 2021-December-21, 11:49
#13
Posted 2021-December-22, 09:59
Passed hand, though - "he has 13 cards, some of which are spades".
#14
Posted 2021-December-23, 08:47
mycroft, on 2021-December-22, 09:59, said:
Thanks, so my vision of you leaning harder on the sturdier crutch was off the mark
I think you're right about partnership trust and expectations being a major factor here: with one partner I would probably follow my instinct to bid 2♠ (he understands and will not punish me in the auction or postmortem) but with another one no way.
#15
Posted 2021-December-23, 11:32
I agree - if 2♥ (or 3♥) is par, we're not finding it over 2♠. But after 1♠ and competition (which he's assuming over 2♠, and is more likely at the 1 level), if they have a fit, you're not playing 2♥ either. You might not even get a chance to bid hearts, for example:
- p-p-1♣-1♠; 3♣, passing much more information than 3♣ over 2♠;
- p-p-1♣-1♠; 2♣-p-3♣. Sure, if partner doesn't pass, you are ahead. For instance, 2♠ (you're never finding hearts, but not likely to matter) or X. But pass is still very likely;
- p-p-1♣-1♠; X-p/2♠-3♦.
I'm not saying that 2♠ is clearly right; it's not. This hand, 1 could be correct, for many reasons (who knows, partner may have a "couldn't open 2♦" hand, especially if our system's 2♦ opening isn't natural, and our best spot is in diamonds!) But this looks like a preempt auction to me, not a "win the constructive" auction. In other words, I'm going to try to beat the field/par by having them guess wrong rather than leaving me the opportunity to guess right.