Do you agree with 4 hearts? What do you bid this time?
WTB What to bid?
#1
Posted 2010-September-29, 22:52
Do you agree with 4 hearts? What do you bid this time?
Never tell the same lie twice. - Elim Garek on the real moral of "The boy who cried wolf"
#2
Posted 2010-September-29, 23:11
BunnyGo, on Sep 29 2010, 11:52 PM, said:
(P)-P-(3♣)-4♥
(5♣)-X-(P)-??
Do you agree with 4 hearts? What do you bid this time?
No, I call director. Maybe the other 3 players have 14 cards each.
#3
Posted 2010-September-29, 23:15
#4
Posted 2010-September-29, 23:46
655321, on Sep 30 2010, 12:15 AM, said:
Aha, how cute!
In that case:
1) Yes I agree with the simple 4H. Slam is possible but I need partner to have 2 aces plus picking up HQ. I am usually not that lucky.
2) I pass. I expect 5H to make, but now +800 is likely for us.
#5
Posted 2010-September-30, 00:02
If I pass I'm going to lead the ♠K.
#6
Posted 2010-September-30, 00:22
#7
Posted 2010-September-30, 00:35
#8
Posted 2010-September-30, 03:21
#1 given that p is a passed hand, 4H is ok, otherwise I would go via X
#2 Now I pass
With kind regards
Marlowe
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#9
Posted 2010-September-30, 03:25
I definitely agree with 4 hearts. This bid doesn't show 8 hearts, or 10 tricks, but it's still much better than anything else.
I think this is a forcing pass auction. In this kind of auction (a passed hand raise of a preempt) it's usually the case that our opponenents are saccing. It's not necessarily true that the opponents always go down after this start, but playing forcing passes gives us the best chance of getting the decision right.
If pass is forcing, then it follows that partner should double with many hands that do not have an ace. I think it is clear to pass the double.
#10
Posted 2010-September-30, 05:29
I don't mind whether you double first or bid a straight 4♥.
#11
Posted 2010-September-30, 05:45
655321, on Sep 30 2010, 06:15 AM, said:
It's a lame attempt, because in Han's notation a singleton is described as "1", not "x"... So this hand has only 10 cards, bleh!
#12
Posted 2010-September-30, 11:49
Free, on Sep 30 2010, 06:45 AM, said:
Well, maybe it is an improvement to use "x" as an alias of "1"...
#13
Posted 2010-September-30, 14:03
Free, on Sep 30 2010, 06:45 AM, said:
655321, on Sep 30 2010, 06:15 AM, said:
It's a lame attempt, because in Han's notation a singleton is described as "1", not "x"... So this hand has only 10 cards, bleh!
Yeah, I'm still not sure how I feel about Han's notation; in particular when I wrote "3" (which was the spot of the x) that was clearly wrong, and when I wrote "1" that just felt weird so I mixed notations. Dunno.
As for what happened, here's the hand:
(5♣)-X-(P)-5♥;
AP
The crowd was correct, I should have sat and lead a spade (or diamond).
Never tell the same lie twice. - Elim Garek on the real moral of "The boy who cried wolf"
#14
Posted 2010-September-30, 14:36
"gwnn" said:
hanp does not always mean literally what he writes.
#15
Posted 2010-September-30, 14:56
vuroth, on Sep 30 2010, 03:36 PM, said:
The double makes sense if pass would have been forcing.
#16
Posted 2010-September-30, 15:10
vuroth, on Sep 30 2010, 03:36 PM, said:
It's called "forcing pass" and it works great. A better player to question would be west.
#17
Posted 2010-September-30, 15:13
"gwnn" said:
hanp does not always mean literally what he writes.
#18
Posted 2010-September-30, 16:07
vuroth, on Sep 30 2010, 04:13 PM, said:
Exactly, this is not a forcing pass situation, you have no reason to suspect you're beating 5♣, or that you want to bid 5♥, defending 5♣ undoubled is perfectly plausible (give patrner AKQ5 and out or KQJ6).
I've never known something that might be a preempt trigger a forcing pass.
#19
Posted 2010-September-30, 16:31
That being said, I don't think it can be assumed, this is still an area of partnership agreement.
#20
Posted 2010-September-30, 16:34

Help

(P)-P-(3♣)-4♥
(5♣)-X-(P)-??