Team game, nothing special about the bidding, 1♣ 3+ std 2/1, x showed 4-4 majors.
2- 3 -4 spade ?
#1
Posted 2012-October-23, 22:51
Team game, nothing special about the bidding, 1♣ 3+ std 2/1, x showed 4-4 majors.
"It's only when a mosquito lands on your testicles that you realize there is always a way to solve problems without using violence!"
"Well to be perfectly honest, in my humble opinion, of course without offending anyone who thinks differently from my point of view, but also by looking into this matter in a different perspective and without being condemning of one's view's and by trying to make it objectified, and by considering each and every one's valid opinion, I honestly believe that I completely forgot what I was going to say."
#2
Posted 2012-October-24, 00:06
#3
Posted 2012-October-24, 02:29
#6
Posted 2012-October-24, 04:06
This means he is marked with a distributional hand and at least 5 cards in clubs.
His most likely distribution is 4♠=1♥=3♦=5♣.
His 1♠ bid means he must be minimum for his opening bid.
While all your points seem to work,(though your partner could be void in hearts) your diamond holding is worrisome.
Partner may well have taken his diamond holding into account when bidding only 1♠.
The choice is between 2♠ and 3♠.
While game still has chances it will almost never make unless the black suits behave and if they don't good opponents holding the balance of high cards will often double 4 spades. This changes the odds for bidding vulnerable games decisively.
2♠ for me.
Rainer Herrmann
#7
Posted 2012-October-24, 04:09
rhm, on 2012-October-24, 03:14, said:
Rainer Herrmann
It is quite playable to play it as
pass=no suitable call (likely a minimum "weak NT" with 1-2 spades)
double=penalty
1♠=3 cards
1NT=good weak NT, good heart stop
2♣=natural
2♦=strong hand
2♠=4 spades
I'm not sure what 2♥ should be. And maybe 1NT could be played as 18-19 balanced but it doesn't seem like you have 18-19 that often in this sequence. At some point 655321 was saying that 1m-p-1H-1S; 1NT should be 18-19 balanced but there only 2 other players bid as opposed to all 3 in this sequence.
George Carlin
#8
Posted 2012-October-24, 04:15
#9
Posted 2012-October-24, 04:30
gwnn, on 2012-October-24, 04:09, said:
pass=no suitable call (likely a minimum "weak NT" with 1-2 spades)
double=penalty
1♠=3 cards
1NT=good weak NT, good heart stop
2♣=natural
2♦=strong hand
2♠=4 spades
I'm not sure what 2♥ should be. And maybe 1NT could be played as 18-19 balanced but it doesn't seem like you have 18-19 that often in this sequence. At some point 655321 was saying that 1m-p-1H-1S; 1NT should be 18-19 balanced but there only 2 other players bid as opposed to all 3 in this sequence.
You can play what you like and enlighten us in a separate thread why your agreements are so much superior to what is standard.
But if somebody else poses a bidding question, you should not assume he plays your set of agreements, just because you are so thrilled by them that you can not imagine anybody playing anything else.
Without further explanation, you should simply assume what seems natural.
Partner will bid spades if he has four (or more) of them and any non spade bid without a jump shows less.
Otherwise your answers are meaningless and you are simply hijacking the thread.
Rainer Herrmann
#10
Posted 2012-October-24, 04:46
2 ♠ is enough. I do not have so many extras...
Roland
Sanity Check: Failure (Fluffy)
More system is not the answer...
#11
Posted 2012-October-24, 04:53
#12
Posted 2012-October-24, 04:57
rhm, on 2012-October-24, 04:30, said:
But if somebody else poses a bidding question, you should not assume he plays your set of agreements, just because you are so thrilled by them that you can not imagine anybody playing anything else.
Without further explanation, you should simply assume what seems natural.
Partner will bid spades if he has four (or more) of them and any non spade bid without a jump shows less.
Otherwise your answers are meaningless and you are simply hijacking the thread.
I am not sure what is standard*, nor am I saying that "my" agreements are better than them. Why are you this sure? Accusing me of hijacking will not cut it, I was answering to your misguided sarcasm attempt at aguahombre; and I think it is relevant to the topic of discussion what this 1S shows.
Over
1m-(1H)-x-p
it is quite standard to play
1S=3
2S=4, so I don't see why
1m-(1D)-x-(1H)
1S would show 4 in standard. X showed 4+ hearts and 4+ spades so why not differentiate between 3-and 4-card raises?
To Codo: Timo did not have any special understanding about this sequence so we will have to guess how many spades 1S shows.
If we are sure 1S guarantees 4 cards, I think 2S is enough, after all with a minimum neg x I can pass.
*I checked the Bridge World Standard and it seems that it does not play 1C-(1D)-x as promising 4-4 in the majors.
George Carlin
#13
Posted 2012-October-24, 05:29
And over 1m (1H) X usually promise 4 spades. Over 1 ♣ (1♦) X does not, so there is not much sense in bidding 1 ♠ with three cards.
Roland
Sanity Check: Failure (Fluffy)
More system is not the answer...
#14
Posted 2012-October-24, 05:33
Codo, on 2012-October-24, 05:29, said:
And over 1m (1H) X usually promise 4 spades. Over 1 ♣ (1♦) X does not, so there is not much sense in bidding 1 ♠ with three cards.
MrAce was very clear that 1♣-(1♦)-x promised 4 hearts and 4 spades. Opener does not 'need' to introduce a 3-card suit but he can. That will help partner compete if he doubled with 5 spades and 4 hearts.
edit: yes, if 1♣-(1♦)-x does not promise 4-4 in the majors (it can be for instance 'one or both majors' or just 'takeout' or whatever), I completely agree that 1♠ has to show 4.
This post has been edited by gwnn: 2012-October-24, 05:34
George Carlin
#15
Posted 2012-October-24, 05:43
gwnn, on 2012-October-24, 04:57, said:
Would you like a bet that MrAce assumed that 1S would clearly be taken as showing 4 cards in spade?
I do not care for your logic, nor for Zelandakh regionalism. Everybody is aware that different bidding systems and conventions are popular in different parts of the world.
I only know, if 1S showed 3 cards in spades MrAce would neither have posted the question nor would he have taken it for granted that everybody knew. He would have made it clear that it showed 3 cards.
The discussion and your assumptions are plain silly.
Quote
1m-(1H)-x-p
it is quite standard to play
1S=3
2S=4,
Maybe this is popular in certain expert circles, calling it "standard" still sounds to me a big exaggeration.
Standard is for me what a good sensible player not from my region at the table would presume without prior agreement.
Quote
1m-(1D)-x-(1H)
1S would show 4 in standard. X showed 4+ hearts and 4+ spades so why not differentiate between 3-and 4-card raises?
Because there is a world of difference between my pass ending the bidding in a doubled contract for the opponents or my pass being neutral denying 4 cards in spades, because RHO has bid and my partner will get another chance to bid in the pass-out seat.
There is also a small but decisive difference between raising with 3 cards, when your partner has shown at least 4 cards in a major and when he has shown exactly 4 cards in a major.
Rainer Herrmann
#16
Posted 2012-October-24, 05:45
2S.
We have a fit, I show the fit, this does not imply add. strength.
Without any agreement, North may not have known, if 2S instead of 1S
showed aynthing add., or if a 2S bid could still be based on a min.
opener.
Even if we end up in a 7 card fit, this is not the end of teh world,
partner is the one short in hearts.
With kind regards
Marlowe
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#17
Posted 2012-October-24, 05:48
George Carlin
#18
Posted 2012-October-24, 06:06
gwnn, on 2012-October-24, 05:33, said:
Of course this helps if you have 5 spades and 4 hearts- but it costs when you need to distinguish between a real good hand a a normal 4135 hand - or the like- because opener cannot jump to 2 ♠ to show a good hand with spades.
Now, you can put all these real good hands into the overcall, but in this case you will overload this bid. Or do you want to jump to 3 Spades with say AKxx,x,Qxx,AKxxx?
In the meanwhile, you solve a problem for one single hand type which many people simply bid natural...
Roland
Sanity Check: Failure (Fluffy)
More system is not the answer...
#19
Posted 2012-October-24, 06:42
I hate the Kiss-of-death D:xxx, but partner is still there.
#20
Posted 2012-October-24, 06:56
1) When OP said the double of a 1♦ overcall showed 4-4 in the majors, he meant 4-4 in the majors ---not maybe 5-4, but 4-4.
2) It doesn't take a special set of fancy agreements for opener to realize he can pretend he is rebidding after a 1♠ response, and "raise" it to the appropriate level with 4 spades as if partner had bid 1♠.
3) That since it was posted in this forum, opener would realize that the neg double and the 1H advance have given him obvious choices he might otherwise not have had. (pass, for instance).
4) A rebid of 1♠ under these conditions, by logic, would show a decent minimum opener with 3-1-4-5 or 3-2-3-5; the second possibility unlikely because of the heart raise by the opponents.
5) With 4-card spade support for responder, opener would not want to give the opponents all that room between 1s and 2S to further compete.
And, yes, we would have alerted 1♠ or 2♠...not because the meanings of those bids should be considered highly unexpected, but because we realize some people might not have given the logic any thought and they should know we raise spades with spades. We also alert the double itself, since it is very specific about being exactly 4-4 in the majors.
This post has been edited by aguahombre: 2012-October-24, 07:10