Bridge Questions I need some advise please
#1
Posted 2015-September-19, 09:43
Doubling: If my partner doubles our opponents opening bid (whether that is 1,2 or 3)and the 3rd seat does not respond to my partners double, am I oblidged to respond myself whatever my hand is like?
I only ask because I have been asked by many past players I should respond to my partners double whatever I have and especially if the 3rd seat passes.
However, this has often left us with a bad contract which we can never make and I feel bad as I responded with a poor hand but felt I was required to respond to my partners double.
Keeping hold of aces:
Time and time again I see players keeping hold of aces when the opponents are in a 4+ contract and ultimately never getting to use them because of distribution.
I appreciate aces are useful to get the lead back, but if one is defending a 4+ contract I always believed it was better to get those ace tricks while you can.
Any advise is very much appreciated.
Thank you, from a very average player:)
#3
Posted 2015-September-19, 13:31
About holding up with aces: no technique or play can be summed up in a simple advice. You cannot apply 'second hand low' all the time, for example. Each case has to be decided on its own and holding up aces in 4+ contracts mught work out not only as a way to keep control or communications but also as a means of making declarer misguess or severing communications with dummy, etc. It's a good idea to read books on defense so you can learn when and why you should hold aces (and quite some other plays).
wyman, on 2012-May-04, 09:48, said:
rbforster, on 2012-May-20, 21:04, said:
My YouTube Channel
#4
Posted 2015-September-19, 13:33
As for when to play an Ace on defense, this is an impossible question to answer on other than a case-by-case basis. And don't forget that sometimes it is beneficial to go to bed with an Ace, eg when playing it would have allowed an entry to dummy or otherwise set up tricks for declarer.
EDIT: crossed above post; I didn't get into the risk/reward aspect of passing a takeout double because I thought it might be TMI, but of course optimising the score is the real and only reason for passing.
Mods, could you move this thread as it is not about BBO?
#7
Posted 2015-September-19, 13:50
woodych, on 2015-September-19, 13:37, said:
It's nothing to apologise for. The main reason for moving it is that people who only check certain forums might miss it when they would have had something helpful to add.
#9
Posted 2015-September-19, 16:17
Suppose partner doubles their 1♦ opening and you hold
♠432
♥432
♦5432
♣432
Passing 1♦ is very likely to lead to a bad result. You have zero defensive tricks so if partner has three or four tricks (which would be quite typical for a minimum opening hand with shortness in diamonds), they will make two or three doubled overtricks. That is very expensive.
So you bid 1♥. More often than not, partner has four hearts for you. Even if he has only three, they may not double you. And a few undoubled undertricks are less expensive than letting them play 1♦ doubled.
So when you pass partner's double it doesn't mean that you have nothing to bid. It means that you are happy to defend their doubled contract.
When should you be happy to defend? Use the law of total tricks as a guideline. It says (somewhat oversimplified) that we should only defend if their number of trumps is smaller than the number of tricks they are contracting for.
Now imagine that partner has one trump. That is his most common length. So:
He doubles a 1-level contract. They are contracting for 7 tricks. So we want to defend if they have at most 6 trumps. I.e. we have at least 7. Partner has one trump. So if you have six trumps, pass. With less than 6, bid something.
Similarly you can calculate that in order to pass partner's double, you need
5 trumps at the 2-level
4 trumps at the 3-level
3 trumps at the 4-level
It is different if partner doubles a notrump contract, of if he doubles a conventional bid, or if he doubles a bid in some convoluted auction. But if partner doubles an opening suit bid or a raise of a suit opening, then this crude rule gives you a reasonable guideline.
#11
Posted 2015-September-20, 08:19
woodych, on 2015-September-19, 16:23, said:
Hi Peter,
It is not just that you can bid with few points when partner doubles. You have to bid when partner doubles, even with no points.
The consequence of having to bid, even with a really bad hand, is that if you do have a good hand, simply bidding something won't do the trick. You need to tell partner that you have a good hand by jumping or by simply bidding game. (Remember that partner's double promised that he has support for the unbid suits.)
As to "really getting it" by the time you are 90: Bridge is such a complicated (but very nice) game that I am sure that I won't get it before I am that old. But that doesn't stop me from playing ... and learning. And neither should it stop you.
Rik
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the new discoveries, is not Eureka! (I found it!), but Thats 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
#12
Posted 2015-September-20, 08:42
This is a very difficult subject that will take years to master (and even then you will go wrong from time to time).
There are two things that are very important in deciding to take an ace or not.
1. What is the correct play if you can see all the cards?
After you have played a set of hands, you can go through the hands and see how you played. Should you have taken the ace or would that have helped declarer? From that you can learn a few things.
Suppose the suit is like this:
KJx
Axxx Q
T9xxx
Declarer (South) leads a small card towards the KJx in dummy. If you go up with the ace, it will be the only trick you will get in the suit. If you play a small card, declarer might decide to play the jack and your side will get two tricks.
2. Figuring out what everybody has.
After a while, you may be able to see when you should take your ace and not when you see all the cards. That is nice, but unless your opponents show you their cards, you don't have that information. So, one of the great challenges in bridge is to figure out what the other hands look like.
This is difficult, but there are a few things that you can do.
a. You and your partner can help each other out by signalling
Partner can tell you (and you can tell your partner) whether you like the suit that you led by playing a low or a high spot card to the trick. When declarer (or dummy) leads to a trick, your spot card can tell whether you have an even or odd number of cards in the suit. This helps in figuring out how many cards declarer has.
b. Listen to the bidding
If declarer has bid spades, hearts, and diamonds, then he is not going to have a lot of clubs. You need to paint a picture of declarer's hand. You can use that information to paint a picture of partner's hand. AFter all, you know your own hand and dummy and you have a picture of declarer's hand. Each suit has 13 cards, so partner needs to have the remaining cards. A few signals from partner will help to coplete the picture, and this makes the picture you have of declarer's hand more accurate.
c. Keep track of declarer's tricks
If grabbing an ace gets the contract down, it is usually a good idea to take it. But if you need more tricks than just your ace to get a good result, it can be good to be patient.
So, you need to count, count, and count: How many tricks does declarer have, how many spades, hearts, diamonds and clubs does he have and how many HCPs does he have? This counting is the essence of bridge. In the beginning it seems like it is absolutely impossible to do all this counting. But if you try, after a few headacehes, you will see that you get better and better at it. They say that good players can see through the back of the cards. They do that by counting.
I wish you good luck in trying.
Rik
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the new discoveries, is not Eureka! (I found it!), but Thats 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
#13
Posted 2015-September-20, 20:00
Trinidad, on 2015-September-20, 08:19, said:
It's more like you "should usually bid" even with no points, because if you pass the opponents get to play their contract doubled, which tends to make, and be expensive for your side, especially if it's 2h+ partial and you would be doubling them into game. Also doubled overtricks add up pretty quickly even if they haven't been doubled into game. The times to be more apt to pass partner's takeout double without a trump stack is when he has made a takeout double of opp's 4M opening, where with a balanced weak hand you don't fancy your chances in 5m and partner rates to have enough stuff to nip their contract one or two, and even if he doesn't they were in game already anyway so the loss isn't quite as huge.
But with length in the opponents suit, and no 4 cd outside suit to bid, passing can be considered even if you don't expect a set, particularly if you haven't doubled the opps into game. It's an estimate thing of how much/how often you think they are making and how badly you expect to go down in your contract, and how likely you are to be doubled in your contract.
Generally you should be very happy to have a 4 cd suit to take out to, even with zero HCP. And really happy if you are still at 1 level. Partner should be aware you are semi-forced to bid and may not have a lot, although typically he will play you for a little something not completely broke. The good thing is even if you go down, in many cases the opponents were making, so your bid works as a sacrifice against their bid. The ugly cases are when partner of opening bidder has a redouble or comes back in with a penalty double.
#14
Posted 2015-September-20, 23:46
Do unto others as you would have others do unto you.
"Mediocrity knows nothing higher than itself, but talent instantly recognizes genius".
#15
Posted 2015-September-21, 02:45
Another point you might consider is when you are the doubler and partner passes. Traditionally, if you double a 1 of a suit opening and everyone passes, your normal lead is a trump. Some older books suggest that if you are the passer and partner does not lead a trump, you should assume they hold a void in the trump suit.
#16
Posted 2015-September-22, 16:19
Trinidad, on 2015-September-20, 08:19, said:
It is not just that you can bid with few points when partner doubles. You have to bid when partner doubles, even with no points.
The consequence of having to bid, even with a really bad hand, is that if you do have a good hand, simply bidding something won't do the trick. You need to tell partner that you have a good hand by jumping or by simply bidding game. (Remember that partner's double promised that he has support for the unbid suits.)
As to "really getting it" by the time you are 90: Bridge is such a complicated (but very nice) game that I am sure that I won't get it before I am that old. But that doesn't stop me from playing ... and learning. And neither should it stop you.
Rik
Thank you Rik
I get it, bad hand still bid, good hand jump or game
Yes i keep trying and will always do so because as you say it is a good game:)
#17
Posted 2015-September-22, 16:24
Trinidad, on 2015-September-20, 08:42, said:
This is a very difficult subject that will take years to master (and even then you will go wrong from time to time).
There are two things that are very important in deciding to take an ace or not.
1. What is the correct play if you can see all the cards?
After you have played a set of hands, you can go through the hands and see how you played. Should you have taken the ace or would that have helped declarer? From that you can learn a few things.
Suppose the suit is like this:
KJx
Axxx Q
T9xxx
Declarer (South) leads a small card towards the KJx in dummy. If you go up with the ace, it will be the only trick you will get in the suit. If you play a small card, declarer might decide to play the jack and your side will get two tricks.
2. Figuring out what everybody has.
After a while, you may be able to see when you should take your ace and not when you see all the cards. That is nice, but unless your opponents show you their cards, you don't have that information. So, one of the great challenges in bridge is to figure out what the other hands look like.
This is difficult, but there are a few things that you can do.
a. You and your partner can help each other out by signalling
Partner can tell you (and you can tell your partner) whether you like the suit that you led by playing a low or a high spot card to the trick. When declarer (or dummy) leads to a trick, your spot card can tell whether you have an even or odd number of cards in the suit. This helps in figuring out how many cards declarer has.
b. Listen to the bidding
If declarer has bid spades, hearts, and diamonds, then he is not going to have a lot of clubs. You need to paint a picture of declarer's hand. You can use that information to paint a picture of partner's hand. AFter all, you know your own hand and dummy and you have a picture of declarer's hand. Each suit has 13 cards, so partner needs to have the remaining cards. A few signals from partner will help to coplete the picture, and this makes the picture you have of declarer's hand more accurate.
c. Keep track of declarer's tricks
If grabbing an ace gets the contract down, it is usually a good idea to take it. But if you need more tricks than just your ace to get a good result, it can be good to be patient.
So, you need to count, count, and count: How many tricks does declarer have, how many spades, hearts, diamonds and clubs does he have and how many HCPs does he have? This counting is the essence of bridge. In the beginning it seems like it is absolutely impossible to do all this counting. But if you try, after a few headacehes, you will see that you get better and better at it. They say that good players can see through the back of the cards. They do that by counting.
I wish you good luck in trying.
Rik
Thank you that all makes sense. I do try to work out where cards are as you suggest.
I guess playing a lot of games will help with that as experience gives rise to better understanding
Great explanations, that you very much:)
#18
Posted 2015-September-22, 16:26
Zelandakh, on 2015-September-21, 02:45, said:
Another point you might consider is when you are the doubler and partner passes. Traditionally, if you double a 1 of a suit opening and everyone passes, your normal lead is a trump. Some older books suggest that if you are the passer and partner does not lead a trump, you should assume they hold a void in the trump suit.
Thank you for that:)
#19
Posted 2015-September-22, 16:27
Stephen Tu, on 2015-September-20, 20:00, said:
But with length in the opponents suit, and no 4 cd outside suit to bid, passing can be considered even if you don't expect a set, particularly if you haven't doubled the opps into game. It's an estimate thing of how much/how often you think they are making and how badly you expect to go down in your contract, and how likely you are to be doubled in your contract.
Generally you should be very happy to have a 4 cd suit to take out to, even with zero HCP. And really happy if you are still at 1 level. Partner should be aware you are semi-forced to bid and may not have a lot, although typically he will play you for a little something not completely broke. The good thing is even if you go down, in many cases the opponents were making, so your bid works as a sacrifice against their bid. The ugly cases are when partner of opening bidder has a redouble or comes back in with a penalty double.
Thank you for that, appreciated:)