zhoraster, on 2018-October-25, 23:31, said:
Of course, normally you shouldn't overcall with hands like that. But after your partner had failed to open (and only after that) this is absolutely necessary, as I have explained.
You have not 'explained' anything. You have made a claim and advanced a very bad argument in favour of it.
Others have pointed out that making overcalls, even those known to be weak, on very weak hands with very bad suits can lead to the opponents extracting a large penalty.
Your response, that you invite such a penalty, suggests that you do not understand the argument, perhaps because it contained an unstated assumption that you failed to pick up on.
The 'going for a number' problem is a valid problem. It presupposes, for much of its strength, that the opponents know what they are doing.
Good opponents will brush aside weak overcalls when their hands tell them that they should be aiming higher. In baseball there is a situation in which a batter hits an easy out...and the fielder has a choice of who to put out...the hitter or a base-runner...he takes, usually, the easier 'sure thing' play. We speak of fielder's choice in bridge as well: a bidder makes a call that presents the opps with two winning choices and good opps are usually able to choose the one that works best for them.
So bidding 2H will usually NOT go for a number, since most of the time West will not have an obvious penalty situation available. In that case, since 2H is not much of a preempt, he will usually simply bid on to the best contract. Every now and then, however, he has an easy penalty, and you go for 800 against a game, or worse.
It's not that 2H rates to go for a number...it usually won't....but it may go for a number and, more importantly, it carries all kinds of other costs to which you see oblivious.
I would not bother to go into detail about how bad your advice is but the OP has indicated that he sees wisdom in your advice and may bear it in mind in future games. In other words, your advice threatens to actively damage someone who is clearly eager to learn and whose basic understanding of the game does not yet permit him to readily identify terrible advice.
2H should be descriptive. Bridge is a partnership game and partners are not merely allowed but supposed to take part in the auction, and the play, based upon the description you provide during the auction. This description can be positive, in the sense that you take a bid, but it can also be negative...many beginning and indeed many intermediate players forget that negative inferences are extremely important....no expert ignores them.
If you bid 2H over 1D, your partner has to be able to play you for a reasonably defined range of hands. Sure, he passed, but all that means is that he doesn't have a hand with which he wants to open. It does NOT mean that he has a hand on which he will forever after pass, especially if you take a bid. Say he has some heart support....now he will raise, and now you are not getting doubled in 2H...you're getting doubled in 3H or 4H or even 5H (when he mistakenly thinks that he should be saving).
An intelligent partner will place you with something akin to KQ109xx in hearts and, if that's what you have, usually a side K or Q. He may over-compete. He may lead the Ace from AJx with the King being to your left. He may choose the K of hearts from Kx rather than a more effective lead.
Sure, sometimes the bad overcall gets a winning result...here the overcall would have led to a heart lead, which would have been effective had they still reached 6S. However, bridge is, in addition to being a partnership game, a game of percentages. One of the reasons that the game is so hard to learn is that bad plays and bad bids sometimes generate good outcomes and it is human, though incorrect, to reason that a good result must mean that we did something good in the play or the bidding. It doesn't.
On one level that makes me happy. I make enough mistakes that, if the game always punished bad decisions, I'd never win anything. More importantly, the game would be so brutal that very few would play it. On another level, it makes it difficult to teach the game. I can argue that playing to drop the stiff King when holding a 10 card fit missing only the King is wrong (as it is, when one has no other meaningful information) but when the printout on the hand record says that one can make 12 tricks by doing so, all kinds of bad players will argue until they are blue in the face that it is an ok play.....usually arguing that once LHO (dummy having the AQJxxxx) follows low, there are only 2 cards left...the K and a spot...and it's as likely RHO has the K as that he has the spot. The fallacy would be obvious to many, but a lot of bad bridge players will allow the fact that the King was stiff offside on this actual hand to influence their thinking.
So, yes, bidding 2H here would 'work' but that is not a good reason for arguing that the call is a smart all, let alone that it was 'essential'.
And if you do get away with this silly overcall, he will notice what you did. When next time you have a real 2H bid, he may be gunshy, and may do the wrong thing out of fear that you don't have your bid.
That latter point is something that poker players and solitaire players forget or ignore...so wrapped up in being the hero of every hand, and the maker of every partnership decision, that they are playing poker or solitaire and not playing bridge, even though they are sitting at the bridge table.
Arguing from authority is a poor approach to teaching, and asserting that 'I'm good, therefore listen to me' is distasteful, but having said that, I am pretty sure that those of us who disagree with you on this point have significantly better bridge credentials than do you.
Finally, once in a while, if one watches very good bridge, one will see a world-class player commit a very weak action. In my experience, this will happen at favourable only, and in the context of a method in which partner knows that one might do this. In the given situation, the vulnerability is wrong (even is not a good situation) and partner won't expect this.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari