You’ve found your fit
#1
Posted 2025-March-27, 19:17
“Let me put it in words you might understand,” he said. “Mr. Trump, f–k off!” Anders Vistisen
"Bridge is a terrible game". blackshoe
#2
Posted 2025-March-27, 20:18
#3
Posted 2025-March-27, 22:45
#4
Posted 2025-March-27, 23:26
#5
Posted 2025-March-28, 01:14
Incidentally, what would 3♦ have been last round?
#6
Posted 2025-March-28, 10:23
DavidKok, on 2025-March-28, 01:14, said:
Incidentally, what would 3♦ have been last round?
3♦ looks like this hand.
over 4♥ do I cooperate and bid 4♠?
“Let me put it in words you might understand,” he said. “Mr. Trump, f–k off!” Anders Vistisen
"Bridge is a terrible game". blackshoe
#7
Posted 2025-March-28, 10:38
I would prefer X over 3D, sometimes your last making contract is 3C.
I find it hard to create a reasonable auction towards 6D, ..., the key is the spade single.
I also play fitbids instead of splinter, ..., the question is, why did I not introduce a
real spade suit over 1H direct. Obv. we know the answer seeing all hands, ..., ask me at the
table, what I make of the bid.
With kind regards
Marlowe
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#8
Posted 2025-March-28, 18:31
P_Marlowe, on 2025-March-28, 10:38, said:
real spade suit over 1H direct.
That is the exact question to ask. How can South have spades (and diamonds) when they couldn't make a negative double or bid 1♠ over the 1♥ overcall. Let alone suggesting playing 4♠ opposite partner who has shown a 2 suited minor hand. It makes zero sense that South can have a 4 level fit bid with spades.
The answer is this sequence can't show a fit bid, so it must be a splinter. If it makes you feel better, call it the impossible splinter, analogous to the impossible major bid.
#9
Posted 2025-March-29, 05:02
johnu, on 2025-March-28, 18:31, said:
In the past I've played with partners who would somewhat often decide that 'this one time there is a clear exception to our meta-agreements, logically it cannot be anything else, so obviously this strange bid must show exactly my hand'. Sometimes it worked, and sometimes it led to great confusion, faulty explanations to opponents, UI issues, and unplayable contracts in the wrong strain. It took me several years to (mostly) stop making bids like this myself. I have more agreements than most for competitive auctions, and I don't deviate from them. If there's a crack in the agreements we will sort it out after the deal. I think splintering in an unbid suit, with a standing agreement to never splinter in unbid suits in competition, is asking for trouble no matter how self-evident it seems to you (mind you: while looking at your own hand).
What's worse, on this deal we have already neglected to bid 3♦ last round. Clearly we shouldn't put all that much stock in partner not playing us for hands we've already denied, otherwise we're completely stuck.
#10
Posted 2025-March-30, 12:55
DavidKok, on 2025-March-29, 05:02, said:
In the past I've played with partners who would somewhat often decide that 'this one time there is a clear exception to our meta-agreements, logically it cannot be anything else, so obviously this strange bid must show exactly my hand'. Sometimes it worked, and sometimes it led to great confusion, faulty explanations to opponents, UI issues, and unplayable contracts in the wrong strain. It took me several years to (mostly) stop making bids like this myself. I have more agreements than most for competitive auctions, and I don't deviate from them. If there's a crack in the agreements we will sort it out after the deal. I think splintering in an unbid suit, with a standing agreement to never splinter in unbid suits in competition, is asking for trouble no matter how self-evident it seems to you (mind you: while looking at your own hand).
FWIW I fully agree, making undiscussed calls with an "obvious" (to us at that moment) meaning is quite often unsuccessful and in any case sows the seeds for a less trusting partnership. I would rather make an uninspiring call (like bidding hearts here, or even diamonds) than hope partner will grasp and admire my latest genial improvisation (here spades).
A few years back, the FIGB commisioned Garozzi to specify a national standard 5 card major 2/1 system. It had many good ideas but had a lot of situations in which "obvious" illogical calls were not only possible but expected and encouraged, whether to set suit, splinter, show slam interest or whatever. The result was unplayable and soon fell into disuse.