What does this show Is there any expert consensus?
#1
Posted 2011-October-04, 14:06
(P) 4♠
What does this show?
#2
Posted 2011-October-04, 14:43
-P.J. Painter.
#3
Posted 2011-October-04, 14:49
phil_20686, on 2011-October-04, 14:06, said:
(P) 4♠
What does this show?
Sounds like a preemptive type hand with spades if non-vul. Since a direct 2S shows some cards and 3S is strong he can't bid origanally but now decides that you may have a reasonable save or be able to push. If vul I have no idea and am not going to try to figure it out.
#4
Posted 2011-October-04, 15:04
only way this makes sense is some highly distributional and WEAK sort
of hand. My vote here is that X would show 4 spades and a 6+ card
minor while 4s would show at least 5 spades and 5 of a minor.
A case can be made that playing the x to show the 2 suiter and 4s to show
the 46 hand is better because partner will play the hand keeping the weak
2 bidder on lead much more often.
depending on vulnerability such hands might look like
QJ32 5 QT5432 54
K7652 3 QJ432 65
not really strong enough to act over 2h but not willing to sell out to 4h.
these types of hands will pop up a ton more often than say
QT9xxxx x xx xx and will generally be less dangerous to bid
since they are two dimensional vs 1.
#5
Posted 2011-October-04, 15:20
If a bid can be natural, it should be natural...all other roads lead to madness as we start playing regressive mindgames whenever we have an undiscussed auction....what will he think I think he will think I will think and so on.
Assuming that the vulnerabiity allows the call to make sense, it shows a long spade suit in a hand that wasn't strong enough to bid over 2♥.
It is standard to play that 2♠ requires approximately an opening hand, 3♠ shows not only an excellent, long suit but substantial values while 4♠ shows the nuts in the spade suit and a decent hand.
A hand such as KQ10xxxx x Qxx xx has no bid over 2♥ within this scheme so has to pass and then choose whether to bid.
#6
Posted 2011-October-04, 16:46
mikeh, on 2011-October-04, 15:20, said:
If a bid can be natural, it should be natural...all other roads lead to madness as we start playing regressive mindgames whenever we have an undiscussed auction....what will he think I think he will think I will think and so on.
Assuming that the vulnerabiity allows the call to make sense, it shows a long spade suit in a hand that wasn't strong enough to bid over 2♥.
It is standard to play that 2♠ requires approximately an opening hand, 3♠ shows not only an excellent, long suit but substantial values while 4♠ shows the nuts in the spade suit and a decent hand.
A hand such as KQ10xxxx x Qxx xx has no bid over 2♥ within this scheme so has to pass and then choose whether to bid.
Well, that sounds exactly like what I said but with a more detailed explanation, well done Mike.
#7
Posted 2011-October-04, 16:55
#8
Posted 2011-October-04, 18:21
phil_20686, on 2011-October-04, 14:06, said:
(P) 4♠
What does this show?
Colors are significantly important
the Freman, Chani from the move "Dune"
"I learned long ago, never to wrestle with a pig. You get dirty, and besides, the pig likes it."
George Bernard Shaw
#9
Posted 2011-October-04, 18:32
#10
Posted 2011-October-04, 19:03
I think the two suiter is more common so that's my preference.
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#11
Posted 2011-October-04, 20:07
-P.J. Painter.
#12
Posted 2011-October-05, 02:35
I don't think the vulnerability matters in determining the meaning. If it's too dangerous to bid 4♠ with KJ10xxxxx x xx xx, it's also too dangerous to bid 4♠ with KJ10xx x x KJ10xxx or KJ10x x xx KJ10xxx.
#13
Posted 2011-October-05, 09:21
But it can also be a three suiter if you play that dbl would be penalties.
#14
Posted 2011-October-05, 11:18
#16
Posted 2011-October-06, 15:49
#17
Posted 2011-October-06, 16:25
delayed 4S shows AK defense - letting partner double.
Don't preempt a preempt to bar those 1-suiters
without defense is stick-in-your-own-eye thinking.
Use forcing T/O bids for strong hands then show 1-suited.
Craft me a 4S bid that couldn't be Force T/O then 4S.
Had to be 4S strong immediately. Then you see that
stick-in-the-eye.
#18
Posted 2011-October-06, 19:01
#19
Posted 2011-October-06, 22:21
In any event, that particular auction actually came up. The pro on my right slid with 4♠ over 4♥ after passing on the first round. I doubled with four spades and enough high cards that I had a heart game to protect against. The pro on my left passed, and dummy hit with a doubleton spade. -1100 later RHO with the 4-6 hand recriminated to the pro on my left that it was 'obvious' what he had and to pull to 4NT without spades.
Does everyone play that auction showing 4-6? I guess some do and some don't.
#20
Posted 2011-October-10, 23:22

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