Every bid is standard treatment. IMP pairs. Bid? Pass? Other?
What Do You Do Now? Your call
#1
Posted 2021-August-29, 22:23
Every bid is standard treatment. IMP pairs. Bid? Pass? Other?
#2
Posted 2021-August-29, 23:36
I think I pass anyway but I'm going to be wrong whatever I choose.
#3
Posted 2021-August-30, 06:52
#4
Posted 2021-August-30, 08:53
smerriman, on 2021-August-29, 23:36, said:
I think I pass anyway but I'm going to be wrong whatever I choose.
Yes, it appears simple at first glance but a little more thought and you realize this could be a double game swing.
#5
Posted 2021-August-30, 09:33
#6
Posted 2021-August-30, 09:46
I once had a similar hand and ended up in 6♣X making.
#7
Posted 2021-August-30, 10:49
We’re going to be very unlucky to catch nothing useful in dummy. LHO might have ‘got’ us by jumping with only 4 card support and a stiff club, as one example, and we catch something like Qx KJxxx xxxx xx in dummy, but we might catch x xxxxx Qxxx Jxx, down 1, usually, into their 480, or a little better…say a red ace, and the diamond onside.
Or anything in-between
Bidding wins when we make 5C or when we fail by one and 4S makes. We win big when both games make.
We basically break even when we fail by two, doubled, and 4S makes.
We only lose big when we go for 800 or more, and we’d need to buy very badly for that to happen
Edit: or if both fail. I think that very unlikely, but not impossible
Tbh, my tendency in real life is to pass, but I’m increasingly forcing myself to bid these days, and think/hope I’d bid here. One needs an understanding partner when one goes 800 or more.
Oddly, this is a tougher decision at mps. 500 might be a disaster whereas at imp pairs, it’s usually a small loss, especially since many such layouts lead to 450 or 480 for 4S.
#8
Posted 2021-August-30, 11:51
#9
Posted 2021-August-30, 12:13
mikeh, on 2021-August-30, 10:49, said:
We’re going to be very unlucky to catch nothing useful in dummy. LHO might have ‘got’ us by jumping with only 4 card support and a stiff club, as one example, and we catch something like Qx KJxxx xxxx xx in dummy, but we might catch x xxxxx Qxxx Jxx, down 1, usually, into their 480, or a little better…say a red ace, and the diamond onside.
Or anything in-between
Bidding wins when we make 5C or when we fail by one and 4S makes. We win big when both games make.
We basically break even when we fail by two, doubled, and 4S makes.
We only lose big when we go for 800 or more, and we’d need to buy very badly for that to happen
Edit: or if both fail. I think that very unlikely, but not impossible
Tbh, my tendency in real life is to pass, but I’m increasingly forcing myself to bid these days, and think/hope I’d bid here. One needs an understanding partner when one goes 800 or more.
Oddly, this is a tougher decision at mps. 500 might be a disaster whereas at imp pairs, it’s usually a small loss, especially since many such layouts lead to 450 or 480 for 4S.
Yes, my first inclination was a pass but I forced myself to slow down and then bid 5C.
#10
Posted 2021-August-30, 14:26
mikeh, on 2021-August-30, 10:49, said:
Aargh, I've made this mistake before. I've had it drilled into my head that down 2 is something to avoid at all costs at this vulnerability, but you're right; it's actually only a small loss at IMPs. And the gain of when it makes far outweighs that. So I've changed my mind (of course, too late).
#12
Posted 2021-August-30, 15:12
#13
Posted 2021-August-30, 17:22
Winstonm, on 2021-August-30, 15:12, said:
Unlucky but not abnormal. Good lead, but it’s fairly standard on this sort of auction. Unfortunately we may well have the worst possible outcome….-500 against nothing.
LHO rates to have some shape but h3 could be 5=3=3=2 where they may fail even in 3S
Oh well.
At least it’s imp pairs so we have no unhappy teammates; merely an unhappy partner.
If we could beat 4S I will refrain from suggesting he should have doubled 4S🤪
#14
Posted 2021-August-30, 20:10
mikeh, on 2021-August-30, 17:22, said:
LHO rates to have some shape but h3 could be 5=3=3=2 where they may fail even in 3S
Oh well.
At least it’s imp pairs so we have no unhappy teammates; merely an unhappy partner.
If we could beat 4S I will refrain from suggesting he should have doubled 4S🤪
It was undoubled so only -200 .
#15
Posted 2021-August-30, 22:52
At MPs, you bid unless there is a chance both contracts go down.
At IMPs, you bid only if there is a chance both contracts make.
#16
Posted 2021-August-30, 23:18
akwoo, on 2021-August-30, 22:52, said:
At MPs, you bid unless there is a chance both contracts go down.
At IMPs, you bid only if there is a chance both contracts make.
So you would not bid 4♠ over 4♥ at green if you were confident of one of the contracts being -1 or -2?
#17
Posted 2021-August-31, 02:47
#18
Posted 2021-August-31, 04:16
DavidKok, on 2021-August-31, 02:47, said:
I may be old-fashioned but the south hand doesn’t match what I’d expect to see for 3S.
Good opponents listen to the auction. 3S says that we expect to have good play for 3N should North own a spade stopper. It’s ok to have a hand where we need a little help or luck in the red suits as well, but that heart stiff is a tremendous red flag to me.
Say the auction proceeds (1S) 3S (p) 3N….all pass
Does anyone think opener is leading a spade from a broken suit when his partner could not double 3S?
I’d like to find opponents who do so.
If they do lead a spade, we need partner to hold a stopper and at least one red ace. More to the point, if they lead a heart, we need partner to hold a heart stopper and another side Ace.
Its important to remember that we are choosing our overcall without any knowledge that responder is about to bid 4S. It’s obvious that 3S is a brilliant call whenever responder bids 4S, but why on earth should we be bidding based on that assumption?
#19
Posted 2021-August-31, 06:12
To put it differently, my preferred definition of the jump overcall sacrifices some chances of making 3NT to show more frequent competitive hand types. I'll go down in 3NT more often, but if the opponents do bid on I'm better placed in the auction. And sometimes partner can jump to 5m instead, which is not automatic if I had chosen 2m instead (especially since, definitionally, partner primarily has spot cards in support). I think being able to show this hand type is a parlay bet - we win if the rest of the auction is competitive, we win if partner has support but was worried about the quality, we go even if 3NT was an OK sacrifice and some days 3NT will make despite the non-spade lead. By contrast we lose on the stronger hand types - those have to double first, after which we might face a tough call over 4♠ - and we lose if 2/3/4♣ was the limit of the hand (in theory we can run to 4♣ but those are slim odds, so at the table we're more likely to lose on that scenario).
#20
Posted 2021-August-31, 07:35
When I first learned the game some book I read urged intermediate jump over calls I still find them useful and I think there is a case for jump over calls being weak, intermediate, and strongish based on vulnerability. This hand being a prime argument as to why.
+++++++++++++++++++++++
Over 1♠, I like Douglas43's suggestion of a conventional 3♠ stop-ask, which describes the hand well and better consults partner's opinion. Now, after LHO's 4♠, I guess...
1. Pass = Pusillanimous but, as team-mates like to point out, it's usually easier to make 4 tricks than 11.
2. 5♣ = NAT. Reasonable punt. Well bid