A Monster Hand
#1
Posted 2018-September-09, 01:31
- Dr Tarrasch(1862-1934)German Chess Grandmaster
Bridge is a game where you have two opponents...and often three(!)
"Any palooka can take tricks with Aces and Kings; the true expert shows his prowess
by how he handles the two's and three's" - Mollo's Hideous Hog
#2
Posted 2018-September-09, 02:18
#4
Posted 2018-September-09, 02:41
PhilG007, on 2018-September-09, 01:31, said:
LOL 4441 hands are notoriously awkward to bid with a 2♣ opener generally, and, what action if any do you take: as John McEnroe would say, "You cannot be serious!"
If X could be misinterpreted, I'm with smerriman bidding 5♠ too. Even if you get a reply after X'ing 4♠ you're hardly going to know if partner has the right cards for a contract at the five, six or, even, seven level.
5♠ might be a losing bid, but bidding is not a perfect science as we all know.
#5
Posted 2018-September-09, 04:52
#6
Posted 2018-September-09, 04:57
smerriman, on 2018-September-09, 02:18, said:
If partner would take 5NT as choice of slams, then 5S should show first-round spade control with a similar message. I'll try 5NT with a partner that would take it that way. Partner should have some chance to work out this is a three-suited hand rather than a two-suiter because I would bid 4NT with all two-suited hands.
But yes, I'm not doubling and giving partner the chance to pass.
#8
Posted 2018-September-09, 06:15
sfi, on 2018-September-09, 04:57, said:
But yes, I'm not doubling and giving partner the chance to pass.
Yes, that's an alternative way of dealing with this hand, but partner's hardly in control of the auction here (or knows that you have a hand with nine controls.) However, I think we all agree that bowing out before a small slam is bid is not an option.
It did go through my mind that bidding 5♠ does give partner an option of bidding 5NT to show the ♠A, that's a possible interpretation open to agreement, but at this level we are talking about specialist bids within a firmly-established expert partnership, and even if the ♠A is shown, where do we go from there: bidding 6♠? All highly speculative and on a wing and a prayer, I feel.
#9
Posted 2018-September-10, 00:52
The_Badger, on 2018-September-09, 06:15, said:
It did go through my mind that bidding 5♠ does give partner an option of bidding 5NT to show the ♠A, that's a possible interpretation open to agreement, but at this level we are talking about specialist bids within a firmly-established expert partnership, and even if the ♠A is shown, where do we go from there: bidding 6♠? All highly speculative and on a wing and a prayer, I feel.
I'm not sure it matters that much. Partner does know that I am forcing to a slam, so:
- If I bid 5NT and partner has the SA, they should be bidding the grand.
- If I bid 5S and partner has a useful ace/king, they should be bidding the grand.
- If I bid 5S and can make a grand opposite nothing more than a four-card suit, I'll bid it myself.
- If we need a key queen or shortage in a side suit to make 7 of something, well, preempts work at times. Other people will be in the same situation after all.
If partner bids 5NT over 5S, I think that would be more useful to show two places to play. That lets partner bid a suit at the six-level with a definite opinion about where to play. And I would take it that way undiscussed sitting opposite an expert. I may not have quite such a pure takeout shape for the bid, after all.
#10
Posted 2018-September-10, 01:30
There's a distinct possibility that the opponents can play a forcing game and we will be shortened in trumps immediately, or, with such a control-rich hand we will be unable to get to dummy to take a vital finesse if trumps break 4-1 or 4-0 with East. But hey, c'est la vie.
#11
Posted 2018-September-10, 01:34
#12
Posted 2018-September-10, 09:54
#13
Posted 2018-September-10, 10:08
#15
Posted 2018-September-11, 03:10
#16
Posted 2018-September-11, 04:03
West deals and opens 4 Spades which is passed round to you. As you inwardly curse West,what action if any do you take?