I did not open 2S on first seat because of ♥ void and a side Ace. At last moment, i was hesitated to bid 5S. I want to know what the pros will do? Thanks in advance.
What do you think of my bidding?
#1
Posted 2005-August-15, 06:16
I did not open 2S on first seat because of ♥ void and a side Ace. At last moment, i was hesitated to bid 5S. I want to know what the pros will do? Thanks in advance.
#2
Posted 2005-August-15, 06:20
THere is nothing wrogn with 4S, though I would consider opening 2S.
Hongjun
#3
Posted 2005-August-15, 06:23
I am not a pro.
Pass is ok as opener, the same is true for the
take out dbl.
The 4S as answer is to much, 3S is enough.
Over 5H Pass.
With kind regards
Marlowe
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#4
Posted 2005-August-15, 06:43
I can not fault 4♠ over the double, I can't really believe anyone would pass initially and then not force to game opposite a takeout double.
#5
Posted 2005-August-15, 07:09
2) Jumping to 4♥ would not be OK as it would strongly suggest WEAK hand. You'll never reach a slam here... (Give partner J of hearts and here you go...
3) jumping to 4♠ against a simple takeout is a gross overbid.
- if partner has the reasonable minimum, you'll make 4♠ ONLY if he has working values, i.e. not something like KJxx in hearts
- if partner has a strong takeout in own suit (this case), you've blocked him and wasted room.
- passing 5♥ is a must. Strong one-suiters are bid this way and they're not meant to be escaped from :-)
Ben: Would you bid a takeout double over 1♦ with:
Kxx-KJxx-Kxx-Axx? xxx-KQJx-Kx-KJxx?
I can construct quite a lot of hands that qualify for takeout even against a passed hand where 4♠ does not make - and I think that, especially given the fact that the responder had 3 jump bids available, 4♠ was simply too much.
jump to 2♠ is 8+ HCP, (4)5card.... Jump to 3♠ promises longer spades... what other values does the hand have apart from the (most likely BAD) asset of heart void?
#6
Posted 2005-August-15, 08:09
coyot, on Aug 15 2005, 09:09 AM, said:
Kxx-KJxx-Kxx-Axx? xxx-KQJx-Kx-KJxx?
I bid 1♥ with the second one. With the first one, I tend to pass.
While you MIGHT construct a few hands where a reasonable person might make a takeout double and game can not make, you can not construct very many. The GREAT percentage of hands game will be laydown and opposite many, slam might be cold. 2♠ bid with this past hand monster is simply not in the "cards". After all, one might jump to 2♠ on a variety of hands. Many will jump with four spades and an nine or ten high card points (I need five to jump with less than 10 hcp).
The need for 4♠ comes about because of passing an opening hand. That is, my hand CAN NOT be this good. So, if I pass (which I would not), I will bid 4♠ here.
#7
Posted 2005-August-15, 08:57
Coyot, I don't believe that (1D)-4H shows a weak hand opposite a passed hand. It could be weak, but it could also be a hand good enough to make 4H. This hand is perhaps too good (but I am really impressed with your dummy play, making 6H opposite the jack of hearts and out!). However, doubling with a void in an unbid major is UGLY and should be avoided at almost all costs.
BTW, having seen some of Inquiry's doubles (and more importantly, passes) makes me pretty sure that he would not double with either of these hands.
- hrothgar
#8
Posted 2005-August-15, 09:21
2) Agree with 4h not double, just bid your darn games and stop worrying about a passed hand having perfect slam cards. (Bergen bidding tip)
#9
Posted 2005-August-15, 09:35
There are some old schoolers that wouldn't open it 2S because of the 2 'flaws' - side Ace and void.
Once North passes, most would double with that huge South hand. The spade void is a big concern, but nothing else fits.
Playing my methods, I'm not sure what I'd do - but I'm not in this mess, since I open it 2S.
Over the double, 4S is automatic, and so is 5H.
I'd be curious to see how the 'light openers' stay out of slam once North opens 1S.
#10
Posted 2005-August-15, 14:28
A)
(1♦)-4♥ might not show weak hand, just too ugly?
Well, I don't want to give my partner guesses. While it has some merits to play bids with intent to preempt OR make (and hiding the true intent from opps), this is good when your partner does not NEED to know. If they bid 5♦ or 4♠, should he bid 5♥ or pass? Will you miss a slam if he passes and you double with the ugly hand?
I think that it is just a matter of agreement how to show a hand that would want to play 4♥. One of them is takeout double and then jump...
The jump to 3-4♠. I see no reason to jump to 4♠ when I can jump to 3♠, telling partner that I have a good onesuiter, too good to jump to 2♠. And I don't want to jump to game with 6suiter and 7 HCP, when my void happens to be in a suit where partner most certainly has some values.
In other words: Paint me some hands that are not good enough to jump to game and too good to jump to 2♠. I think there is plenty of room to differentiate and 4♠ is an overbid in this sense. What will you do with a better hand, one of almost opening values? (If your system does not handle it for some reason, that is...)
#11
Posted 2005-August-15, 14:59
coyot, on Aug 15 2005, 10:28 PM, said:
Excuse me, but I am lost. One thing is that you don't open that hand, fair enough, but implying that the hand is not close to having opening values opposite a take-out double of diamonds is going a bit far.
3♠ would be a serious underbid in my opinion.
Roland
#12
Posted 2005-August-15, 15:20
#13
Posted 2005-August-15, 15:27
mr1303, on Aug 15 2005, 04:20 PM, said:
Some people, perhaps Miles in his new book?, claim you can never be too strong to overcall.
Perfer 1H if my only other choice is x.
#14
Posted 2005-August-15, 15:38
mike777, on Aug 15 2005, 04:27 PM, said:
mr1303, on Aug 15 2005, 04:20 PM, said:
Some people, perhaps Miles in his new book?, claim you can never be too strong to overcall.
Perfer 1H if my only other choice is x.
Explain this to teammates, when it goes
Pass - (1D) - 1H - all pass
Sorry, there exists a upper limit for a one level
overcall, and the hand in question exceeds this.
With kind regards
Marlowe
PS: It is different, when it comes to overcalls at the 2 level, but
we are dealing with one level overcalls here.
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#15
Posted 2005-August-15, 16:13
P_Marlowe, on Aug 15 2005, 04:38 PM, said:
mike777, on Aug 15 2005, 04:27 PM, said:
mr1303, on Aug 15 2005, 04:20 PM, said:
Some people, perhaps Miles in his new book?, claim you can never be too strong to overcall.
Perfer 1H if my only other choice is x.
Explain this to teammates, when it goes
Pass - (1D) - 1H - all pass
Sorry, there exists a upper limit for a one level
overcall, and the hand in question exceeds this.
With kind regards
Marlowe
PS: It is different, when it comes to overcalls at the 2 level, but
we are dealing with one level overcalls here.
I can explain easy, if 1h can be 23 hcp how can you pass partner with your hand? Partner if we agree to play this style please do not go off into your own little world, play our cc! Of course playing this style bid 4H also, but my poor bidding does not excuse partners.
#16
Posted 2005-August-15, 16:37
My theory is that there's not such a thing as a hand "between" 1s and 2s, I think that you must open either 2s or 1s depending on your style but you can't pass.
Luis
#17
Posted 2005-August-15, 16:45
luis, on Aug 15 2005, 05:37 PM, said:
My theory is that there's not such a thing as a hand "between" 1s and 2s, I think that you must open either 2s or 1s depending on your style but you can't pass.
Luis
Why?
Why cannot you not pass with this hand?
I prefer my weak 2 bids to have hcp in the long suit, not with outside aces.
That seems very playable.
#18
Posted 2005-August-15, 16:50
#19
Posted 2005-August-16, 01:36
#20
Posted 2005-August-16, 02:00
Walddk, on Aug 15 2005, 03:59 PM, said:
coyot, on Aug 15 2005, 10:28 PM, said:
Excuse me, but I am lost. One thing is that you don't open that hand, fair enough, but implying that the hand is not close to having opening values opposite a take-out double of diamonds is going a bit far.
3♠ would be a serious underbid in my opinion.
Roland
I would open that hand, of course
But... a takeout double over diamonds promises support for majors, statistically 3 spades and 4-5 hearts... so the void is placed badly...
To the point...
p-1♦-x-p-?
There are several bids available for good hands with spades:
2♠,3♠,4♠,2♦.
Now, if this 7HCP hand with a badly placed void is worth game-jump, how would a 3♠ hand look like, if 2♠ promises (8)9+HCP?...
Also, imagine QJxxxx-Kx-Ax-xxx (and pretend that this hand does not qualify for any system opening). This hand is no doubt worth 4♠ against takeout double - and most likely is a trick stronger than the hand in question.
I don't really mind the intent of playing spade game against a regular takeout double, but the following points speak in favor of 3♠:
1) Partner will hardly pass anyway, unless his hand is ugly and minimal... such a 3♠ jump basically says that the hand is too good to jump to 2!
2) We're getting some protection and/or saving bidding space here in the case that partner has strong notrump or own-suit double.
Give partner Kx-AQx-Kx-AKQxxx and 6 clubs is laydown... but can he bid it after your jump to 4♠? What if you're void in clubs, not hearts? If you jump to 3♠, he will bid 4♣ and you have plenty of room to investigate the slam...

Help

Pa (1D) Dbl (Pa)
4s (Pa) 5h =