Probability partner has 3 diamonds
#1
Posted 2013-August-07, 00:37
#2
Posted 2013-August-07, 02:41
I'll leave the calculation of the exact odds to someone else
#3
Posted 2013-August-07, 02:44
But the fact that opps are silent changes it quite a bid, I would think, especially if they are nonvulnerable.
#4
Posted 2013-August-07, 06:42
Is 2NT forcing / unlimited? That might matter, as it would help explain silent ops.
-gwnn
#5
Posted 2013-August-07, 11:23
Now, how often do you open 1♦? You play 5 card majors, and a 5+ card suit is held about 64% of the time. When not the right strength for 1NT, you will open a major about 32% of the time, the remainder split between the minors depending on your methods (longer? which if equal? clubs with balanced hand and diamonds is unbalanced?) but assume ♣ is twice as often as ♦. Then you open 1♦ 68/3% of the time. "B" = 23%
The probability that a 1♦ open is 3 cards is therefore A/B or 7.8% Does this seem plausible?
#6
Posted 2013-August-07, 17:23
more important than whether pard has 4 diamonds.
6322 in flat and unlucky. 6331 is better. 6430 is even
better.
#7
Posted 2013-August-07, 18:09
#8
Posted 2013-August-08, 07:34
fromageGB, on 2013-August-07, 11:23, said:
As nobody has torn holes in this yet, continuing with the bidding, presumably partner would not rebid 2NT but would bid 3m with a 6 card suit or a xx55 (and of course, opponents bid a major on these) so 1/3 of the 23% can be ruled out. That makes the chances of 4432 distribution 12%.
Further, let us say that when opener has this shape opponents will bid 10% of the time, when he has 4 diamonds in a {4432} 30% of the time, and when he has 5 diamonds 50% of the time. (I know plenty of people who would not overcall with a 5 card major unless they have 10 hcp, or 12hcp over my 2♦.) So on these assumptions, the chance of partner having a 4432 with the bidding as it has been coming back to you becomes 16%. So 84% possibility of 4 diamonds or more.
Do I get a coconut?
#9
Posted 2013-August-08, 11:19
#10
Posted 2013-August-09, 02:15
fromageGB, on 2013-August-07, 11:23, said:
Now, how often do you open 1♦? You play 5 card majors, and a 5+ card suit is held about 64% of the time. When not the right strength for 1NT, you will open a major about 32% of the time, the remainder split between the minors depending on your methods (longer? which if equal? clubs with balanced hand and diamonds is unbalanced?) but assume ♣ is twice as often as ♦. Then you open 1♦ 68/3% of the time. "B" = 23%
The probability that a 1♦ open is 3 cards is therefore A/B or 7.8% Does this seem plausible?
No, because you have 6 diamonds. That clearly affects partner's possible diamond length.
#12
Posted 2013-August-09, 23:49
FrancesHinden, on 2013-August-09, 02:15, said:
That was the whole point of my question.
Specifically, this is what I saw:
We play 15-17 NT, and I assume she usually opens 1{DI] with 4-4 minors (it was a first-time partnership, we hadn't discussed this).
Should I be expecting that we have a 10-card fit in diamonds, or is a 9-card fit more likely because of my extra length? The opponents did have 5-card suits (South was 5-5 in the majors, North had 5 clubs), but the vulnerability kept them silent.
I drove to 6NT, but it turned out that 5 was the limit in both NT and ♦. Partner's shape was 3=3=4=3, with a loser in each side suit, but one of them could be disposed of. It was matchpoints (the 2nd qualifying session of the Wernher Pairs), so I was right to stay in NT, but I pushed too high and we got a poor board.
#13
Posted 2017-March-12, 23:07
barmar, on 2013-August-09, 23:49, said:
We play 15-17 NT, and I assume she usually opens 1{DI] with 4-4 minors (it was a first-time partnership, we hadn't discussed this).
Should I be expecting that we have a 10-card fit in diamonds, or is a 9-card fit more likely because of my extra length? The opponents did have 5-card suits (South was 5-5 in the majors, North had 5 clubs), but the vulnerability kept them silent.
My intermediate sense is: Your partner would have misbid if she had had only three diamonds.
2NT from her is an invite to 3NT if you have better than minimal values. If her hand suggests to her that the partnership should look for a suited contract she'll name a 4+ major, will respond with clubs if she has no 4-card major and is 3-5+ in the minors, or will raise your diamonds with 4-card support. 3-3-3-4 would be a hand that bids NT in response to your 1D opener. So any scenario in which she had 3 diamonds would be covered by major, NT, or clubs bids.
#14
Posted 2017-March-14, 09:00
JLilly, on 2017-March-12, 23:07, said:
2NT from her is an invite to 3NT if you have better than minimal values. If her hand suggests to her that the partnership should look for a suited contract she'll name a 4+ major, will respond with clubs if she has no 4-card major and is 3-5+ in the minors, or will raise your diamonds with 4-card support. 3-3-3-4 would be a hand that bids NT in response to your 1D opener. So any scenario in which she had 3 diamonds would be covered by major, NT, or clubs bids.
I think you're confused about who "I" and "partner" are in the scenario. I'm responder with 6 diamonds, she is the one who opened 1♦.