Downgrade and pesky opps
#21
Posted 2012-February-13, 10:04
Trust my partner to have a ♠ stopper so hamman eggs in one basket
the Freman, Chani from the move "Dune"
"I learned long ago, never to wrestle with a pig. You get dirty, and besides, the pig likes it."
George Bernard Shaw
#22
Posted 2012-February-13, 10:32
2. I would bid 4♠, a great hand with short ♠. I can see how 3NT or 3♠X could score better on some layouts, but I think that 4♠ describes my hand very well so why not just bid it?
#23
Posted 2012-February-13, 13:28
I get the impression that a lot of people's 1NT opening is half a point lighter than 15-17, so any above average 14 would qualify and any above average 17 is out. If that's your style then obviously it is not a 1NT opener.
On the second one you need an agreement. My preference is that all of these kind of doubles are for takeout, and in this kind of auction that means partner should bid when he has average (or slightly above average) defence compared to what can be expected from the auction to date. With that understanding I am comfortable doubling on this hand.
#24
Posted 2012-February-13, 13:48
I used to be all macho "I WILL NEVER DOWNGRADE" and I have recently downgraded a couple of times, but this is just not the hand. I feel like if you downgrade this, you should downgrade most 4333 18s, because this hand is definitely above average for a 4333 18 count even with no spot card.
#25
Posted 2012-February-13, 15:07
JLOGIC, on 2012-February-13, 13:48, said:
Just going to frame this. Perhaps my friends will stop laughing at me when I talk about the number of jacks in my hand ... of course there is plenty more to keep them amused.
#26
Posted 2012-February-13, 16:47
JLOGIC, on 2012-February-13, 13:48, said:
Definitely disagree. Every 4333 18 count will have either similar or better honour combinations or more aces. The HCP have to be somewhere.
Putting this another way, which hand is better:
Qxx
KQx
AJx
AQxx
QJx
Kx
AJ9x
AQ10x
If people think the first hand is better, then I disagree and we can test that with a simulation. If people would not open 1NT with the second hand then I would suggest they are not really playing a 15-17 NT.
#28
Posted 2012-February-13, 17:38
Quote
OK, I will start. How often 3NT makes opposite 6-7 balanced with maximum 4-4 in majors (the hand which passes 1NT opener but drives o game opposite 18-19).
1st hand:
3NT makes 46%
2nd hand:
3NT makes 35%
Which is not really surprising if you did a lot of those simulations before.
In short:
Quote
This is correct.
Shape is overrated (when it comes to 1NT openings), you should never downgrade just because you have 4-3-3-3 and probably you shouldn't upgrade because of 5-3-3-2. What counts are pc, spots and aces. (A's are underrated and two tens and two nines are worth almost 1pc while 3 tens are probably a bit more than 1pc).
Some people did a lot of research with dd simulations and real hand results to arrive at those conclusions, I won't repeat this discussion here.
I can just say, that I am paying attention to this stuff and imo this upgrading algorithm:
a)don't worry about shape
b)add 1PC for 2aces and 2tens or 3tens or 2tens/2nines/one ace
c)downgrade only awful hands without any spots
Is imo better than w/e people at w/e level come up with.
#29
Posted 2012-February-13, 17:42
pooltuna, on 2012-February-13, 10:04, said:
Trust my partner to have a ♠ stopper so hamman eggs in one basket
Enough already with the attempted pun. It may have been amusing the first time, but by now all it means is that you are making yet another horrible 3N call, apparently just so you can make the pun, since there is no obvious bridge logic behind the call.
#30
Posted 2012-February-14, 03:52
For what it is worth, I gave the second hand to three of my friends over dinner yesterday. These are all better players than I am so perhaps Paul will find this interesting. Well, I didn't give the hand that Paul posted but partner's hand: A10x xxx KQx J10xx. First, two out of three insisted that they wanted to bid 2NT instead of 1NT because of the nice 10's and fitting diamond honours. Of course I didn't allow that.
After the double of 3S, one bid 4NT ("but I really should have 5 clubs for this") and 2 bid 4S. The 4NT bidder admitted that 4S was a much better bid than 4NT. Nobody was discussing the option of passing, and they reacted surprised when I told them that's why I asked the question.
When I gave them partner's hand, one said she would certainly double and didn't see any reasonable alternatives. The other two wanted to bid 4S instead and said they almost never double with a void.
- hrothgar
#31
Posted 2012-February-14, 04:05
han, on 2012-February-14, 03:52, said:
For what it is worth, I gave the second hand to three of my friends over dinner yesterday. These are all better players than I am so perhaps Paul will find this interesting. Well, I didn't give the hand that Paul posted but partner's hand: A10x xxx KQx J10xx. First, two out of three insisted that they wanted to bid 2NT instead of 1NT because of the nice 10's and fitting diamond honours. Of course I didn't allow that.
After the double of 3S, one bid 4NT ("but I really should have 5 clubs for this") and 2 bid 4S. The 4NT bidder admitted that 4S was a much better bid than 4NT. Nobody was discussing the option of passing, and they reacted surprised when I told them that's why I asked the question.
When I gave them partner's hand, one said she would certainly double and didn't see any reasonable alternatives. The other two wanted to bid 4S instead and said they almost never double with a void.
Thanks.
I do not think the player who passed the double would try to defend his decision with the benefit of more time. The real challenge is to find six clubs, on the 4-4 fit, rather than six diamonds on the 5-3. If the opener continues with 5NT (choice of slam) do you want to introduce a jack-high four-card suit?
#32
Posted 2012-February-14, 04:37
han, on 2012-February-14, 03:52, said:
Out of interest han, after Phil's post and this opinion from your friends are you thinking 4♠ is ok here now or do you still think double is the only reasonable call as your third friend did?
#33
Posted 2012-February-14, 06:30
phil_20686, on 2012-February-13, 09:36, said:
If 4 club is nonforcing, how do you bid hands where you want to force to game? Do you have to open them 2 ♣?
Roland
Sanity Check: Failure (Fluffy)
More system is not the answer...
#34
Posted 2012-February-14, 07:17
paulg, on 2012-February-13, 15:07, said:
I remember thinking that I'd done well to maintain a straight face!
Tom Andrews concluded, based on DD analysis, that
4.0 - 2.8 - 1.8 - 1.0 - 0.4
was a good point-counting metric for balanced hands in NT, and that whether you were 4333, 4432 or 5332 made very little difference, in fact 4333 came out slightly ahead.
This will be partly due to 4333 not being able to be dealt a "negative feature" doubleton [Qx, KQ, etc.] It also seems plausible that being able to make a DD lead may be more significant when declarer is comparatively shapely.
#35
Posted 2012-February-14, 07:28
Codo, on 2012-February-14, 06:30, said:
Why cant I bid 5C? Partner already denied hearts.
#36
Posted 2012-February-14, 07:47
Zelandakh, on 2012-February-14, 04:37, said:
I think that partnership style has something to do with it. For example, I know that when her partner passes out a takeout double the opponents are in serious trouble, while my partner passes much more often. So I should be more careful doubling with voids than she is. Of the other two friends one admitted that his partner also only rarely passes, so he thought that perhaps he should double as well. The third just said he just hates doubling, which is well known among us.
Paul, perhaps after double followed by 4S opener can jump to 6C. That seems better than 5NT.
- hrothgar
#37
Posted 2012-February-14, 08:55
#38
Posted 2012-February-14, 09:56
mikeh, on 2012-February-13, 17:42, said:
so all I get from you is I hate the 3NT call and it doesn't make sense but no recommendation on an alternate call. As far as bridge logic goes partner failed to make a negative X and chose instead 1NT. So a 2♥ reverse is pretty pointless only a 4♣ call seems available to show our values but of course bypasses 3NT. Since it seems like a pretty unilateral choice IMO you are pretty much stuck with "hamman eggs in one basket" sure you might miss a minor suit slam but the ♠wastage kind of argues against that.
the Freman, Chani from the move "Dune"
"I learned long ago, never to wrestle with a pig. You get dirty, and besides, the pig likes it."
George Bernard Shaw
#39
Posted 2012-February-14, 10:12
pooltuna, on 2012-February-14, 09:56, said:
I thought there was a lot of good discussion about the various calls. My thoughts were:
If 4♣ were forcing, it would get my vote, but I would be concerned that partner will think I have a hand with, say, 6-5 minors and no real extras, and can't sell to 3♠.
If double were purely takeout, that's clearly best. I like the treatment, but most of my partners are even more old-fashioned than I am so I would be concerned that they'd pass too often. Note that even pure takeout doubles can be left in. If partner's spade holding were QJ9x for example, he might well choose to leave it in, depending on the rest of his hand.
4♠ is an overbid, but not by much.....it seems unlikely that 5m can't have a play.
In my partnerships, I would bid 4♠ and later see whether I can persuade partner that double is best.
3N would not have occurred to me as a sensible alternative.
#40
Posted 2012-February-14, 12:19
Hand 2) My hand looks tremendous so I'll bid 4♠ which really should show a void most of the time.