tolvyrj, on 2011-March-29, 20:46, said:
Im north and its my turn after prd has bid 3♣ the oppos suit my RHO has dbled that; what to i do now? Do i start to second guess my prds bidding, because opps bid like they do? Do i start to find answers to questions prd didnt ask?
Nope. I bid 3Nt because prd asked me to bid it if i have a stopper in ♣ suit. I trust my partner not to oppos for the obvious reason that hes the only guy in the table at my side.
North cant know what is going on, he cant decide not to bid 3 Nt; if he does so hes second guessing his own pard bidding.
whereagles, on 2011-March-30, 03:53, said:
While you are totally correct in theory, in practice it doesn't work like that. The game is played by four players and you have to give everybody the right amount of credit for their actions. And it happens that sometimes partners don't have their bids, as it probably was the case here.
It certainly happens that partners don't have their bids. But there are two reasons for that:
1) Partner has made a mistake.
2) Partner had to chose a bid that "misdescribed his hand least".
1)
If you are playing for partner to make a mistake, you are killing your partnership, unless you are aware of certain mistakes partner makes and allow for it which would be an implicit agreement. So, I will assume that partner is not making a mistake.
2)
There are some situations that are difficult to bid. So, North should wonder whether this could be one of those before he bids 3NT "just because partner told him to". Now North would be better placed in understanding his system than I do, but I would say that 3
♣ is not the bid that I would expect partner to make in a difficult situation. I would expect partner to start the ball with 2
♥, which certainly has a more cooperative feeling to it than 3
♣ which forces North to make a decision between 3
♦ and 3NT that he can only make based on his club holding. (Note that the double is a red herring. South bid 3
♣ before he knew that West was going to double. That means that South needs to be prepared to play in 3NT opposite the North hand.)
My verdict in assigning blame:
North: no blame
South: all the blame, even though it was a gamble that could have worked.
My verdict in assigning credit:
Assume that the distribution of cards between EW would have been a little more fortunate for NS. I would assign the credit to NS for the good result that they would have gotten as follows:
North: all the credit for trusting his partner
South: all the credit for trying for a lucky game.
Rik
I want my opponents to leave my table with a smile on their face and without matchpoints on their score card - in that order.
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the new discoveries, is not “Eureka!” (I found it!), but “That’s funny…” – Isaac Asimov
The only reason God did not put "Thou shalt mind thine own business" in the Ten Commandments was that He thought that it was too obvious to need stating. - Kenberg