Your call?
Extreme distribution, your bid?
#1
Posted 2025-May-01, 07:24
Your call?
#5
Posted 2025-May-01, 07:47
Edit: with may regular partner we have 4♣ as leaping Michaels in 4th seat after a suit has been shown. Don't think its ever come up though.
#7
Posted 2025-May-01, 08:05
AL78, on 2025-May-01, 07:24, said:
Your call?
Are you sure they know 2♦ is a transfer. I've been caught out before playing Acol? Once played a pair where it was announced transfer, but turned out to be ♦.
#8
Posted 2025-May-01, 08:34
mw64ahw, on 2025-May-01, 07:52, said:

Reminds me of a friend playing with a weaker partner who played in a 1-0 fit after a 1♠-4♥ auction, I never play with weak or pickup players.
#9
Posted 2025-May-01, 08:55
Now what?
#10
Posted 2025-May-01, 09:03
Cyberyeti, on 2025-May-01, 08:34, said:

#11
Posted 2025-May-01, 09:18
mw64ahw, on 2025-May-01, 07:52, said:

You are in greater peril if you adjust your bidding to cater for weak partners.
"100% certain that many excellent players would disagree. This is far more about style/judgment than right vs. wrong." Fred
#12
Posted 2025-May-01, 09:21
AL78, on 2025-May-01, 08:55, said:
Now what?
I don't like 4♠, I have 2 suits. Now you're in a bad spot.
"100% certain that many excellent players would disagree. This is far more about style/judgment than right vs. wrong." Fred
#14
Posted 2025-May-01, 09:29
jillybean, on 2025-May-01, 09:21, said:
I think you have an easy 6♣ bid after 5♥
Personally, I would probably bid an immediate 6!C under the assumption that I will ruff a opening heart lead and then either
1. Claim 6 or 7
2. Start running a whole bunch of clubs and forcing a bunch of discards between folks know what's what.
Parter will have either the Ace of Diamonds or the K of Spades at least 4/9ths of the time.
#15
Posted 2025-May-01, 10:11
jillybean, on 2025-May-01, 09:21, said:
It is far from ideal but I have no way of showing a two suiter or of bidding both suits at a low level in a forcing manner, so this is what I thought was one of the less bad options. I did consider blasting slam but in a weak field, there is always the chance I might buy the contract in game, and if I do and slam is there, no-one is bidding it.
#16
Posted 2025-May-01, 10:25
DavidKok, on 2025-May-01, 09:03, said:

No the strong player opened 1♠, his much weaker partner bid 4♥ and he didn't know whether she knew splinters, looked at his void and decided it was probably a suit.
We play 1♥-3N as 3343/3334 13-15, void splinters, singleton splinter raises thru inv+2N
#17
Posted 2025-May-01, 10:25
hrothgar, on 2025-May-01, 09:29, said:
Personally, I would probably bid an immediate 6!C under the assumption that I will ruff a opening heart lead and then either
1. Claim 6 or 7
2. Start running a whole bunch of clubs and forcing a bunch of discards between folks know what's what.
Parter will have either the Ace of Diamonds or the K of Spades at least 4/9ths of the time.
I bid 6♣ much to the astonishment of partner who thought I'd pulled out the wrong bid and this was the outcome:
At the time of bidding the slam I thought it has chances, there is just enough room for partner to hold ♦A or ♠K, or the ♠K could be onside, and even if I go off, they likely have a heart game on.
Unfortunately the 4-0 break, the spade king offside and missing the ♦A meant I went two down for -500 and a 29% board. Two out of nine other EW pairs found the cold 6♥, several were in 4 or 5♥, a couple were in 4 or 5♠ and one went one down in 6♠. If we were in 6♠, West has to find a club lead to take me two down which they are very unlikely to find.
Good to know I wasn't way out with my line of thinking going by the responses here.
#18
Posted 2025-May-01, 10:35
I'm surprised your partner didn't correct to 6S but if they are used to fielding your misbids, its understandable

"100% certain that many excellent players would disagree. This is far more about style/judgment than right vs. wrong." Fred
#20
Posted 2025-May-01, 14:11
Cyberyeti, on 2025-May-01, 10:25, said:
We play 1♥-3N as 3343/3334 13-15, void splinters, singleton splinter raises thru inv+2N