Psychological Interference Double with threats
#21
Posted 2013-July-24, 22:16
Here you have 12 pts and bal but you have 9 pts in Kings no stray J or Q. KQJ is not so bad.
You hand is better than hands like
Axxxx
KJx
Qxx
Qx
I do believe fast arrival is a correct concept, but it should be applied to a very narrow range of hands..IE the lowest of the low.
For instance, he doesn't like being used as a human shield when we're being shot at.
I happen to think it's a very noble way to meet one's maker, especially for a guy like him.
Bottom line is we never let that difference of opinion interfere with anything."
#22
Posted 2013-July-25, 02:18
mikeh, on 2013-July-24, 09:38, said:
Firstly, those who criticize it write as if the entire world plays serious or frivolous 3N. Most bridge players don't and it is the height of condescension to write posts, even in the expert forum, on the basis that only bad players don't. I haven't played it in any of the partnerships with which I have won my country's team trials, and I don't think that my failure to do so made either me or my partners non-experts.
e.
Nobody said that the world play ser/ or nonser 3NT, nor that alle xperts do- so what is your point? Being rude for no reason?
Quote
Here, East has no aces. Yes, the diamonds are nice but the diamond J is often wasted, since partner rates to hold Axxxx. Meanwhile the trump are very weak and we have no singletons, no Aces, no texture and no shape. Playing 2/1 gf, the East hand is close to horrible and 4♠ is a reasonable choice. Personally, IF I had a gadget, I might use it because of the diamonds, but to call 4♠ horrible is silly.
We do agree that 2 ♠ had limited our hand, for some to 12-14, for many to 12-15, don't we? Of course if 2 ♠tells nothing, this would be another story. But nobody plays it that way. So if this hand is an ugly minimum for you, what had you bid with Kxxxx,KQx,Jx,QJx- and a million more weak hands with not fitting honours.
Partner makes a slam try opposite my opening. Any takers who holds the aces? He knows that we holds 12-14 HCPS and still makes a slam try...
Roland
Sanity Check: Failure (Fluffy)
More system is not the answer...
#23
Posted 2013-July-25, 02:53
I don't see how we can fault the 4S bid for getting us too high. Think about what that implies, opposite a cuebid we might stop in 4, but opposite a signoff we get to 5? That makes no sense, a cuebid is stronger than a signoff.
#24
Posted 2013-July-25, 03:04
Codo, on 2013-July-25, 02:18, said:
I did not think he was rude at all but I guess it is a matter of perspective.But anyway...
Codo, on 2013-July-25, 02:18, said:
Partner makes a slam try opposite my opening. Any takers who holds the aces? He knows that we holds 12-14 HCPS and still makes a slam try...
FYI If OP is playing 2/1, it is ridicilious to think that 2♠ limited the hand. What is he supposed to do ? Jump to 3♠ with something like KJxxxx AKJ x AJx ? Or make some other flawed bid both screwing up your space with bad suits ? Not knowing whether pd has a solid suit or his suit is the weakest aspect of your combined hands, after already wasting the space ? Disregard all i said if their system is not 2/1 please, but if it is 2/1 do not be surprised to find yourself in minority about 2♠ being limited.
@Lycier : Did W think south, who would be on lead,
"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."
#25
Posted 2013-July-25, 06:16
MrAce, on 2013-July-25, 03:04, said:
FYI If OP is playing 2/1, it is ridicilious to think that 2♠ limited the hand. What is he supposed to do ? Jump to 3♠ with something like KJxxxx AKJ x AJx ? Or make some other flawed bid both screwing up your space with bad suits ? Not knowing whether pd has a solid suit or his suit is the weakest aspect of your combined hands, after already wasting the space ? Disregard all i said if their system is not 2/1 please, but if it is 2/1 do not be surprised to find yourself in minority about 2♠ being limited.
Ok, so maybe this is the point, here in Germany (and not just here) many people are influenced by the FES style, where 2 ♠ shows just that you hold a normal (11-14 or similar) opening and no lower suit to bid. It does not deny a diamond fit or a balanced hand.
If you use 2 ♠ more like a waiting bid and if you have no no other way to limit your hand later, you need to bid 4 ♠.
Actually I would be surprised, if the limiting nature of 2 ♠ is a minority view, but I honestly do not know. If someone is interessted to make a survey, I would like to know how big the minority is...
And of course this style is not ridicolous. If you take the given hand, in your approach you need all the space up to 4 ♠ to limit your hand, sounds not like a great idea.
And these minimum semibalanced hands are much more common then your 6313 example with extra strength a weak suit and a shorthness in partners suit..
Roland
Sanity Check: Failure (Fluffy)
More system is not the answer...
#26
Posted 2013-July-25, 07:00
Codo, on 2013-July-25, 02:18, said:
We do agree that 2 ♠ had limited our hand, for some to 12-14, for many to 12-15, don't we? Of course if 2 ♠tells nothing, this would be another story. But nobody plays it that way.
Irony, thy name is Codo
#27
Posted 2013-July-25, 07:49
Codo, on 2013-July-25, 06:16, said:
Actually I would be surprised, if the limiting nature of 2 ♠ is a minority view, but I honestly do not know. If someone is interessted to make a survey, I would like to know how big the minority is...
Maybe, when one is profoundly ignorant, one should not be quite so ready to assert that 'nobody plays it that way'. if you 'honestly do not know' why post with such certainty?
There have been countless posts on BBF in which a number of good players have suggested that the auction 1♠ 2x 2♠ can be and is by many played as essentially a waiting bid. Indeed, in 2/1 (arguably the most common method amongst tournament players based on global numbers), there are two schools of thought, and one of them is precisely that: 2♠ is the default catch-all call, with other calls having narrowly prescribed meaning.
Just as not everybody plays an artifical 3N in the OP sequence, not everybody plays your particular style for the 2♠ bid either. Maybe when I criticize you (actually, in my OP it was more Free than you whom I felt had made an error), it is because you are wrong?
#28
Posted 2013-July-25, 08:10
mikeh, on 2013-July-25, 07:49, said:
As played by 100% of my partners and myself over many years and I don't care about the rest.
What is baby oil made of?
#29
Posted 2013-July-25, 09:44
I believe SEF, for example, needs a 15 count to bid 2NT with a balanced hand. I agree with Codo that "limited" is the first assumption that should be made when partner bids this (depending on system). Additional strength is needed to raise partner, or bid above 2♠.
#30
Posted 2013-July-25, 10:13
Codo, on 2013-July-25, 06:16, said:
Actually I would be surprised, if the limiting nature of 2 ♠ is a minority view, but I honestly do not know. If someone is interessted to make a survey, I would like to know how big the minority is...
Well it depends on whom you apply the survey.
This is expert forum and most experts that i know play 2♠ rebid by opener not limited to 11-14. This of course doesn't mean "all experts play it this way" but when you said "nobody plays it this way" i was surprised.
Even those who plays it not limited divides into groups among themselves. For example i personally do not bid 2♠ with all 5332 hands, AJxxx Kxx xx KQx 1♠-2♦-2NT(12-14 or 18-19 ) is what i like. And those also divide into groups among themselves again, those who always bid 2NT with 12-14 and those who bids it with hands like one i constructed. Or those who always bid 2♠ with all 5332 hands.
Now when you said SEF is popular, i kinda figured where this is coming from. French players are not the biggest fan of opening 1NT with 5 card majors. In fact this was like some sort of religious thing for majority of them for a long time. I am not sure if they changed their style on this in last decade but if you are not opening 1NT with 5 card majors, the way you prefer 1M-2x-2M can be different. Because at the top of everything i wrote, now they have the 15-17 limit to deal with as well.
"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."
#31
Posted 2013-July-26, 00:27
In the other word it was not suitable for the application of the principle of fast arrival in this sort of hand.
I think minmum hand is not a reason for the lost of slam,the application of the principle of fast arrival is not a reason for the lost of slam! It is of important to show the feature of your hand actively.
#32
Posted 2013-July-26, 02:42
lycier, on 2013-July-26, 00:27, said:
In the other word it was not suitable for the application of the principle of fast arrival in this sort of hand.
I think minmum hand is not a reason for the lost of slam,the application of the principle of fast arrival is not a reason for the lost of slam! It is of important to show the feature of your hand actively.
Most of what you wrote seems personal opinion. But you are resulting imo. Even if we agreed to resulting, i would not blame the guy with 12 hcp and only one keycard (not even an Ace) and 5332 shape. Blame goes to the guy with 19 hcp. If W believed pd did not have ♣ control why did he bid 4NT ? If he believed pd has one why did he stop at 5 level ? There is a reason why people felt the neccesitty of inventing something called "serious 3NT" or its versions.
But assume South did not double 5♣, how would you bid slam with 1kc+♠Q missing anyway ? Had N held the ♠ Q would you still post this hand ? Or had E held ♠ T woul you still post this hand ? You ended up playing perfectly normal contract. Doesn't look like a hand that you should lose your sleep over it.
"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."
#33
Posted 2013-July-26, 04:44
2- My friend have suggested me to use a remedy to resolve this problem after double if available in bidding space:
XX=first control
next cheapest bid=second control
return to bid trump agreed=deny any control
#34
Posted 2013-July-26, 05:11
lycier, on 2013-July-26, 04:44, said:
2- My friend have suggested me to use a remedy to resolve this problem after double if available in bidding space:
XX=first control
next cheapest bid=second control
return to bid trump agreed=deny any control
Lacking any control, he can just pass. A return to the trump suit says we are off two key cards and the next suit should mean whatever it would have meant without the double.
#35
Posted 2013-July-26, 09:09
PhilKing, on 2013-July-26, 05:11, said:
+1
Exactly. Double by S helped your side rather than making things uncertain for you. West totally blew it up when he bid 5♠
@ Lycier:
-5♠ =We are short in keys
Pass = We have enough keys but i am not sure we stop clubs, after that -----------> E bids 5♠ lacking ♣ control, and shows Q of trumps or whatever else he wants to show with a ♣ control. Those are optional, but choice between pass and 5♠ by W is not. Not bidding 5♠ by E w/o a club stopper is not.
W can keep on asking trump Q or whatever else he wants to know if he has 1st or 2nd round control in clubs.
"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."
#36
Posted 2013-July-26, 10:03
lycier, on 2013-July-26, 00:27, said:
I think minmum hand is not a reason for the lost of slam,
You're concerned that EW 'missed' a slam that depends on picking up Q10xxx in trump with no losers? Not to mention that there is the possibility of a club ruff whenever S has Axxxxx or x in the suit.
Move the spade J into the 5 card suit and only a very tall player, making maximal use of his peripheral vision, would make the slam and yet we've made the East hand stronger!
You are more than welcome to believe that EW ought to bid slam on these hands: indeed, I'd love to play you for serious money, in a long match, if you truly believe that E-W 'lost' a slam here.
E-W did misbid, imo. But they overbid, not underbid. They should have been in 4♠.
#37
Posted 2013-July-26, 11:29
#38
Posted 2013-July-26, 11:45
000ffj, on 2013-July-26, 11:29, said:
Firstly, it is trivial to layout NS hands on which 5 level contracts fail, so your stated premise is flawed.
Secondly, the objective of good bidding is NOT to bid to the level that you will usually make.
Thus if we think we can take 9 tricks in spades, we get no reward for bidding 3♠ rather than 2♠. Indeed, if we always bid 3♠ on hands that will usually but not always take 9 tricks, we will score, in the long run, far worse than those who consistently stop in 2♠.
This effect is magnified, due to the game bonus, when we aim to bid to the 5 level every time we think we can make 11 tricks.
We play at the 5-level in a major only when:
1) the opps have saved and we consider that bidding on is better than doubling
2) we are saving
3) we have explored for slam and found out that slam is best avoided.
Here, the only justification for going to 5♠ is the last one. However, and this is crucial for anyone aspiring to be an expert, it is important to understand that West has no business thinking of slam after opener's bidding. IOW, an expert W facing an expert E would know that there was no real likelihood of partner holding a hand that would justify W bidding slam: and he'd know that over 4♠.
Please read or re-read JLOGIC's initial post here where he describes the tendency of many players to think that holding an 18 or 19 count hand opposite an opening means that one should always drive to slam.
I think this thread offers non-experts a huge amount of insight into how to bid cooperatively and how to learn to trust partner. Yes, West has an enormous hand, but when East announces a horrible hand, via the 4♠ bid, West has to learn how to say the magic word: pass.
When we have these auctions in my partnerships, in a friendly game, we have been known to utter a squealing sound, as West, over the 4♠, which sound is the sound of the rapid application of brakes. West put his foot on the accelerator by forcing to game (assuming 2/1 gf) and then made a slam try....further depressing the accelerator...and East jammed on the brakes as hard as he could by his 4♠ which, regardless of serious/frivolous 3N implications, shows an awful hand in context.
Once you learn how to bid these hands and to stop at the 4-level, knowing what you are doing, you will have raised the level of your game a notch.
#39
Posted 2013-July-26, 18:26
lycier, on 2013-July-24, 04:53, said:
See Fred's "Improving 2/1 Game Force" and in his first article "The (misguided) principle of fast arrival"
#40
Posted 2013-July-26, 19:46
glen, on 2013-July-26, 18:26, said:
Thank you very much,now let's review Fred's "Improving 2/1 Game Force" and in his first article "The (misguided) principle of fast arrival" .
Quote
......
you have a laydown slam.the five level is not safe. The problem here is the jump to game. This bid deprives you of finding out at a safe level whether or not a spade control exists. The theory behind using the principle of fast arrival after 2/1 auctions is that without fast arrival, neither partner ever gets to express whether or not they have extra values. Standard 2/1 places such a large emphasis on bidding out your pattern and finding out how well the hands fit that the bidding is often at a high level before either partner has been able to limit his hand. Using fast arrival gives responder a chance to say that he has a minimum 2/1. Unfortunately, the price that must be paid for limiting responder's hand is too high. There are simply too many times that you need the four level for cue-bidding, especially when opener's hand is virtually unlimited (as is usually the case in 2/1 auctions). Even if both opener and responder are minimum, twelve tricks can easily exist if the hands fit well.
For this hand,the east seat should cuebid 4C instead of 4S to the game for fast arrival.