32519, on 2013-July-31, 09:48, said:
I think that this is an area where we, and probably many others as well, leak a lot of points. I have jimmied some of the cards from the actual hand to present this layout -
Game is on. However the problem is that West does not know either East's hand strength or actual distribution i.e. is the ♠ suit only 4-cards, or is it 5? My own methods are hopeless here as I have no way of exploring for game. I need to find a bid to announce a double fit and invite game. I don't (DONT) have one? How about your methods? How would you find the game here? Then I can dump DONT.
Game is on. However the problem is that West does not know either East's hand strength or actual distribution i.e. is the ♠ suit only 4-cards, or is it 5? My own methods are hopeless here as I have no way of exploring for game. I need to find a bid to announce a double fit and invite game. I don't (DONT) have one? How about your methods? How would you find the game here? Then I can dump DONT.
If your goal is to always reach playable games after the opps open a strong Notrump, my advice: give up the game. You are chasing moonbeams.
It is possible to reach playable games over their strong notrump but it is impossible to reach all of them and thinking that you 'should' be able to do so is an error.
The odds are that the hand belongs to the opps. The odds are that, left to their own devices, a competent set of opps will get to a good contract. Not all the time. LHO might hold a balanced 0 count. But bridge is about frequency of gain or loss, even at imps or total points (where size of gain or loss are also and sometimes more important).
The probabilities make it desirable to maximize our ability to disrupt their auction, even at the expense of negatively impacting our ability to accurately handle hands with game potential. We don't want to destroy our chances of game, but we do want to assign that target a much lower priority than getting in and fighting for the partscore.
Thus this hand is about showing our 2-suiter, in the hope that we can outbid them at the 2 or 3 level, not about how to reach 4♠.
Until and unless you learn that you have to operate within the constraints of the situation, you will never become a good bridge player.