Honestly passing or dishonestly responding?
#21
Posted 2015-November-27, 07:00
To limit this hand to HCP runs against that premise.
I would value it as playing points and make an easy 1♠ bid.
#22
Posted 2015-November-27, 07:03
This premise should not be ignored just because one happens to be responder rather than overcaller.
I would value this as 7 playing points and make an EASY 1♠ bid
#23
Posted 2015-November-27, 07:05
fourdad, on 2015-November-27, 07:03, said:
This premise should not be ignored just because one happens to be responder rather than overcaller.
I would value this as 7 playing points and make an EASY 1♠ bid
sorry for the double post...i cannot type worth a damn.
#25
Posted 2015-November-27, 09:43
fourdad, on 2015-November-27, 07:05, said:
Funny. You apologize for a double post by making it a triple.
#26
Posted 2015-November-27, 11:01
lycier, on 2015-November-26, 05:21, said:
This one is easy: If you have a fit, your hand is strong and you should bid. If you don't have a fit, your hand is weak and you should pass.
On a more serious note, just think of what will happen if you bid or if you pass. Certainly you don't want to miss a ♠ fit. But if you bid now, partner's most likely rebids are ♥s, ♣s and NT. You don't like any of these and you may not be able to make another bid because that would probably be forcing or misdescibe your hand even more.
If you pass with this hand, it is unlikely to be passed around. So you can bid in the next round and partner will understand your hand. For example, if opponents bid ♥, you may be able to bid 2NT (Unusual NT, what else?). If this ends up with the opponents bidding 5♥, opener will know what is good for your axis.
If the ♦s and the ♠s were reversed, it would be a very different matter. I would bid ♠ in the first round rebidding if necessary to show a 6-card suit with few HCPs. The ♦s suit would probably be lost, but who cares?
#28
Posted 2015-November-27, 13:54
I'll bid 1 ♠ and pass the next round unless forced to bid again.
But part of this is knowing if partner jumps to 2 NT, I'd have Wolff to get us out of the auction at 3 D.
#29
Posted 2015-November-27, 16:05
#31
Posted 2015-November-27, 18:52
Personally, I would bid 1s on this hand, because if you don't, the opponents are likely to find a heart fit, and the next time you get a chance to bid, the auction could be at the 3 or 4 level.
Could a 1s bid work out poorly? Sure. If partner has a strong 2416 hand or something similar, your side will end up overboard, maybe badly overboard, and maybe doubled. But on balance the potential gains ought to greatly outweigh the potential losses.
As for "trust," you are expected to use your judgment in the bidding, not to slavishly follow rules like a GIB bot.
Happy playing,
Mike
#32
Posted 2015-November-28, 03:33
S Garton Churchill self published two books on bridge without conventions. He was a genius who is little known.
#33
Posted 2015-November-28, 04:09
jodepp, on 2015-November-27, 16:05, said:
This method seems to get pretty high on a potential misfit, and dangerous if partner's 1NT rebid is a weak NT. And if partner's rebid is 2♣ passing seems best.
#34
Posted 2015-November-28, 07:10
#35
Posted 2015-November-28, 10:24
Vampyr, on 2015-November-28, 04:09, said:
No question that can happen, but if opener responds 1NT or 2NT you 'know' you have a diamond fit so the danger isn't as bad as it first appears (this is assuming you can get to 3♦ via a Wolff signoff over 2NT). It also sends the message 'stop bidding' when opener reverses into 2♥ (presumably you can lebensohl into 3♦).
#36
Posted 2015-December-03, 00:41
lycier, on 2015-November-26, 05:21, said:
It is often said to believe the partner,however as a partner,sometimes you might not be honest.
This is a classic hand.
After opening 1♣,your responding 1♠ should promise 5+hcp,if you really respond and once you get a bad result ,I am afraid you maybe lose your partner's trust from now on.
However,if you honestly passing,and once you lose the game,I am afraid your partner might think you are a silly precisian and also lost partner's trust.
Now,how to make choice? How do you think of it?
start by playing a 1c forcing system. precision is good enough.
#37
Posted 2015-December-03, 05:08
all loomis, on 2015-December-03, 00:41, said:
yes, and all your problems are solved when the auction comes back at you at the 3 level by the opponents.
Psyche (pron. sahy-kee): The human soul, spirit or mind (derived, personification thereof, beloved of Eros, Greek myth).
Masterminding (pron. mstr-mnding) tr. v. - Any bid made by bridge player with which partner disagrees.
"Gentlemen, when the barrage lifts." 9th battalion, King's own Yorkshire light infantry,
2000 years earlier: "morituri te salutant"
"I will be with you, whatever". Blair to Bush, precursor to invasion of Iraq
#38
Posted 2015-December-03, 09:57
all loomis, on 2015-December-03, 00:41, said:
This has very little to do with anything. True, you wouldn't end in 1♣; but that was not going to happen anyway -- but if it did, it might not even be bad.
Come to think of it, yeah...let's change our whole system so on this hand we can pass a 1♦ opening that others would open 1♣.
#39
Posted 2015-December-03, 10:10
rmnka447, on 2015-November-27, 13:54, said:
I'll bid 1 ♠ and pass the next round unless forced to bid again.
But part of this is knowing if partner jumps to 2 NT, I'd have Wolff to get us out of the auction at 3 D.
Opponents are going to balance most of time. Bidding often leads to partner bidding the impossible game.
#40
Posted 2015-December-09, 01:33
but there is nothing wrong with p. 4th chair may rescue, or pd may have 6 c tricks.