What's your plan?
3046 oh boy
#1
Posted 2022-November-05, 19:35
What's your plan?
#3
Posted 2022-November-06, 01:25
Douglas43, on 2022-November-05, 20:09, said:
That is the easy bit. I have a feeling we have a jillybean bridge movie coming up (Having a complete guess here, it is not partner who bids his longest suit ♥ here and we have an uninterrupted auction, but the opps. throw in heavy interference in ♥ into your bidding machine. So, we may not even get to reverse with 2♦.)
#4
Posted 2022-November-06, 03:30
LBengtsson, on 2022-November-06, 01:25, said:
If the opponents throw in hearts we should be able to show our contempt and progress in one of the black suits, without bothering diamonds. But hold onto your seat and order some popcorn
#5
Posted 2022-November-06, 07:21
LBengtsson, on 2022-November-06, 01:25, said:
Much simpler than that!
Partner would have bypassed a 4 card ♦ suit to bid a 4 card major.
#6
Posted 2022-November-06, 07:31
Also since 1♦ denies four hearts (maybe only if partner is below a certain strength/length requirement?) the opponents have at least 10 between the two of them. Awfully generous of them to stay silent.
#7
Posted 2022-November-06, 07:41
The opps are very reserved, this was at a bidding table with no opposition bidding so unfortunately, EW will pass throughout.
#8
Posted 2022-November-06, 07:46
#9
Posted 2022-November-06, 07:56
#10
Posted 2022-November-06, 08:11
#11
Posted 2022-November-06, 08:26
I do not agree usually with the weak hand being the boss in the auction and bidding RKCB in an auction, but you have described your hand so its now up to partner to decide where the final contract is.
#12
Posted 2022-November-06, 08:33
Over 4♣ you are going to get a 4♠ response. (corrected)
I see the key to this hand is the splinter, which we didn't have.
#13
Posted 2022-November-06, 08:53
At the table I would need some time to think when 4♥ comes back to me (Edit: see final paragraph for the corrected auction). Clearly a lot of points are riding on the next few rounds of bidding, and the auction thus far is completely consistent with my 'trap hand' example where we should settle for 6♦, but we might also have a cold 13 tricks opposite a slightly different hand. Some possible bidding plans include:
Bid 4NT (RKC Blackwood), where we will know what to do if partner shows 0 or 2, and with 1 we will just have to settle for 6♦ (I make it a habit not to gamble that partner's ace is the vital one).
Bid 4♠ (control), hoping partner can bid 4NT and we get to show our hand (for me: 6♦, an odd number of keycards with a void - unfortunately partner won't know about our good king of clubs). If partner bids 5♦ (weak) or 5♣ (last train) we can bid on, either with 5♥ (must show a void) or just blasting 6 opposite a signoff.
Jump to 5♥ now - either Exclusion (a bit late) or void-showing with a super positive. I think this is a fine plan since we are always going to at least 6 and we are not that interested in asking for key cards anyway. Partner will know how to value the ace of spades and queen of clubs, but might be discouraged by the lack of diamond AK. If skipping 4♦ denied those two cards that should not be an issue though.
I don't have an agreement about the difference between the immediate 5♥ or a delayed 5♥ after bidding 4♠. Partner showing a heart control should lower our expectations (speaking of: do you have an agreement that this shows an ace opposite a splinter? There is not much point showing a king) - the 'perfect minimum' for 7♦ now looks something like ♠Ax, ♥Kxx, ♦Qxxxx, ♣xxx and on a bad trump split that's not even all that easy. I think partner should be able to make a positive noise with most hands that give us chances in 7♦, so I am a fan of bidding 4♠ now. As an additional bonus since we've splintered earlier partner will know that this control bid is based on values, which will allow partner to judge that their 3♠ control is golden if based on an honour and lousy if based on shortness.
Edit: never mind, I wrote all of that before seeing the 4♠ bid (instead of 4♥). That is great news and should promise the ace, though I'm not scared of a void either. I want to find out about the minor suit queens, and one way to do it is by bidding 4NT, then when 5♣ (1/4) gets back to us bid 5♥ asking for the queen, and when 5NT (queen, no kings) gets back to us bid 6♣ (asking for general extras). Alternatively we can jump to 6♣, asking for club support, but it is unclear that we are looking for the queen and not the king. Lastly there's still the option of bidding 5♥ (or even 5♠), telling partner we've got all the key cards and want something extra. I think I will stick with Blackwood, but the other routes should work too if partner is alert.
If partner is holding something like ♠Ax, ♥xxx, ♦xxxxxx, ♣xx 13 tricks are cold and I'm not sure how to find it, though partner should show the queen with a 10-card fit, and might be able to judge that the doubleton in clubs (the king has already been denied so that's not an issue) is enough 'extras' on the 6-level, so the RKC plan might still work.
#14
Posted 2022-November-06, 09:15
This is how the auction should have gone
#15
Posted 2022-November-06, 09:29
#16
Posted 2022-November-06, 09:58
Note that what is often touted as a major drawback of these methods - control-bidding a King opposite a singleton - caused no problems in practice. The real downside of our auction is that we will always get a spades lead from attentive opponents, whereas less precise methods might gain an overtrick.
#17
Posted 2022-November-06, 15:16
Just saw the hands. 6NT perhaps with a bit of luck - EDIT we found 6C with me bidding North and being pushy
#18
Posted 2022-November-06, 15:24
thepossum, on 2022-November-06, 15:16, said:
Just saw the hands. 6NT perhaps with a bit of luck
That's what we wondered, but I think 2♣ on this hand is just a filler for the holes in our system, and would introduce new problems.
This is a new partnership and we have a lot of things to work through.
#19
Posted 2022-November-06, 16:40
Often it works, if it doesn't you move on to the next hand
#20
Posted 2022-November-07, 17:17
Italian style cue bids
1st round (Ace, void) and 2nd round (K, singleton) cues
If the first cue is above game level, we show a 1st round control.
A cue in partners known shortness is an Ace
A second cue of a suit confirms 1st round control, either in a natural cue sequence or after an apparent game try sequence.
(first example is true as the cue is also above game, should it necessarily show first round if it is below game as in the second example?)
1♥:2♥
3♣*:4♥
5♣*
1♥:2♥
3♣*:3♥
4♣*
3♣ ostensibly a game try, 4♣, 5♣ 1st round cue asking partner to begin cue bidding sequence.