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Your turn to bid

Poll: Your turn to bid (33 member(s) have cast votes)

What do you bid now ?

  1. Pass (27 votes [81.82%] - View)

    Percentage of vote: 81.82%

  2. 4 Spade (6 votes [18.18%] - View)

    Percentage of vote: 18.18%

  3. Something else (0 votes [0.00%])

    Percentage of vote: 0.00%

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#21 User is offline   akwoo 

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Posted 2014-March-19, 11:31

If it made the overtrick, I'd be asking some questions with a view towards calling the director.
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#22 User is offline   mikeh 

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Posted 2014-March-19, 14:03

If the opps are playing inverted, then partner can't have the hand he held unless one of the opps has deviated from their agreements, and it is folly to base bidding decisions on the assumption that they have. Therefore, when deciding whether to bid game or not, one should NOT assume that the opps have a combined 20 count.

When they do, chalk it up to the opps screwing around and be extremely careful of these guys in the future....to the point that I would ask them whether this was a systemically acceptable action and, if told that it was, I'd speak to the director to ensure that these bozos don't continue to lie to their opps in the future. If they say it wasn't, then I'm make a mental note and be on the lookout for such action in the future.

Meanwhile, back in the real world, bidding 4 has to be way against the odds. He has to be able to compete with few values, some shape, and Hxxx in spades, where the H is the A or K. Don't hang partner.
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#23 User is offline   aguahombre 

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Posted 2014-March-19, 14:35

Their lack of honesty or their lack of knowledge about 2C, whichever it was this time, seems to have worked to our benefit. But, I would still pursue the avenues Mr. Hargreaves mentioned.
"Bidding Spades to show spades can work well." (Kenberg)
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#24 User is offline   MrAce 

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Posted 2014-March-19, 17:04

View Postaguahombre, on 2014-March-19, 14:35, said:

Their lack of honesty or their lack of knowledge about 2C, whichever it was this time, seems to have worked to our benefit. But, I would still pursue the avenues Mr. Hargreaves mentioned.


Neither.

In fact they are known to be one of the most ethical pairs. About the knowledge...well...He is Richard Pavlicek...I am sure he knows or heard what an inverted minor is.

He represented some sort of invitation hand. I think it is way too harsh to make comments about their ethical behaviour in a negative way, don't you think ? His pd did not have a hand to accept his invitation. We all make bids that are skinny for our bid. For example the in other topic i posted, i doubled with only 9 hcp (the hand they preempted 4 making when we have 4 or 5 available) As long as his pd knows only what we know, and acts accordingly, we can not accuse 2 bidder for any ethical issues.

Having said that, do you guys think N hand worth an invite ? He seems to have valuable cards looking at his JTx and opponents opened this suit, raised and re raised it. He also looks at a very rich hand in spots. If so, how can we invite ? Do we use 3, coming from pass, showing fit or should it be natural promising nothing about spades ? How about DBL ? How about 3 ? Or should we just ignore the invitation hands when opponents started inverted minor ?



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#25 User is online   Cyberyeti 

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Posted 2014-March-19, 17:18

View Postaguahombre, on 2014-March-19, 14:35, said:

Their lack of honesty or their lack of knowledge about 2C, whichever it was this time, seems to have worked to our benefit. But, I would still pursue the avenues Mr. Hargreaves mentioned.


Just because your view of an inverted raise doesn't match theirs is not their problem, all inverted means is that 2>3. For us this is a point away from an inverted raise, and all they said was that it was F1 not FG so you shouldn't expect a huge amount more than this.
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#26 User is offline   jogs 

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Posted 2014-March-19, 17:46

View PostMrAce, on 2014-March-19, 04:44, said:



This was the whole deal. I passed 3 and just made it when both spade and diamond finesses failed. I think we should be in game. Don't know how though, since i also believed i have a clear pass.


Doesn't 3 go down with a small heart lead? Assuming IMPs mini, wouldn't much of the field be defending 3? 20/20 split of the HCP. Play for plus scores.
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#27 User is offline   MrAce 

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Posted 2014-March-19, 17:48

View Postjogs, on 2014-March-19, 17:46, said:

Doesn't 3 go down with a small heart lead? Assuming IMPs mini, wouldn't much of the field be defending 3? 20/20 split of the HCP. Play for plus scores.


I do not think they can defeat 3 but i gtg work now, will check it later.
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#28 User is online   Cyberyeti 

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Posted 2014-March-19, 17:51

View Postjogs, on 2014-March-19, 17:46, said:

Doesn't 3 go down with a small heart lead? Assuming IMPs mini, wouldn't much of the field be defending 3? 20/20 split of the HCP. Play for plus scores.


Only if you hook the spade, if you play ace and another you just lose a trick in each suit
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#29 User is offline   jogs 

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Posted 2014-March-19, 18:07

View PostMrAce, on 2014-March-19, 17:48, said:

I do not think they can defeat 3 but i gtg work now, will check it later.


They defend DD. You play normally. Lose to K, A, heart ruff, K, and A.
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#30 User is offline   mikeh 

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Posted 2014-March-19, 18:14

View PostCyberyeti, on 2014-March-19, 17:18, said:

Just because your view of an inverted raise doesn't match theirs is not their problem, all inverted means is that 2>3. For us this is a point away from an inverted raise, and all they said was that it was F1 not FG so you shouldn't expect a huge amount more than this.

Wrong analysis.

Say the opps announce 1P 2N as Jacoby 2N and it turns out that they meant, by that, that it showed 6 and fewer than 7 hcp. Would you argue that they committed no wrong, because their view of a jacoby 2N doesn't match yours?

Now if all they said was F1, and no more, that is different, tho it should prompt some questions. However, if they announced 'inverted' that would, imo, be misleading since the common meaning of inverted minors is possession of 9-10+ hcp, and there is nothing about the East hand that justifies any upgrade. If for them inverted means a decent 8 count or more, I have no trouble with it so long as they announce it.

I don't care what their names are. Indeed, I would argue that the greater one's reputation, the more one should practice active ethics. However, let me stress, if they announced F1, and nothing more, then I don't have any difficulty with it. The Op used the term inverted.
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#31 User is online   Cyberyeti 

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Posted 2014-March-19, 18:20

View Postjogs, on 2014-March-19, 18:07, said:

They defend DD. You play normally. Lose to K, A, heart ruff, K, and A.


Depends on many things including how many clubs are required for 1 and thus how many for the inverted raise.

If they lead a heart and duck, you assume they're 4-2 and there's a ruff coming, if 5 are required for the invert, opener has a max of 4 therefore depending on system may not be able to have 3/2 as he'd have opened 1 so opener has the 4 so you play spades by playing ace and another. You only go off if opener is 4234 and responder is 0445 where he might not sell to 3.
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#32 User is offline   steve2005 

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Posted 2014-March-19, 20:20

it's hard to bid 20 pt games and be right. even this hand lose dummies T and not nearly as good
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#33 User is online   Cyberyeti 

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Posted 2014-March-20, 00:01

View Postmikeh, on 2014-March-19, 18:14, said:

Wrong analysis.

Say the opps announce 1P 2N as Jacoby 2N and it turns out that they meant, by that, that it showed 6 and fewer than 7 hcp. Would you argue that they committed no wrong, because their view of a jacoby 2N doesn't match yours?

Now if all they said was F1, and no more, that is different, tho it should prompt some questions. However, if they announced 'inverted' that would, imo, be misleading since the common meaning of inverted minors is possession of 9-10+ hcp, and there is nothing about the East hand that justifies any upgrade. If for them inverted means a decent 8 count or more, I have no trouble with it so long as they announce it.

I don't care what their names are. Indeed, I would argue that the greater one's reputation, the more one should practice active ethics. However, let me stress, if they announced F1, and nothing more, then I don't have any difficulty with it. The Op used the term inverted.


Jacoby has a GF element usually associated with it, that is off planet different. I play 1M-2N as sound raise to 3 or better and announce it as that, not Jacoby.

Playing something that is usually 9+ as 8+ is a bit different (particularly if they routinely invert on 4 card support as we do). Would you have old school Acol players who (change of suit) 2/1 on an 8 count alert that all the time, because you'd be laughed out of court on this side of the Atlantic, and inverting on the same as you 2/1 would not be abnormal. I reiterate, all inverted tells you is that 2m is a better hand than 3m, that is the inversion and if it's F1 you should only expect somewhere between 8+ and 11+ points as their minimum, much as you would for a non GF 2/1. Opps also weren't asked if this was some sort of deviation or routine. Inverted F1 is actually a better description than F1 as it tells you there was a weaker raise available (rather than a catchall 1N).
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#34 User is offline   HighLow21 

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Posted 2014-March-20, 00:12

View PostMrAce, on 2014-March-19, 04:44, said:

This was the whole deal. I passed 3 and just made it when both spade and diamond finesses failed. I think we should be in game. Don't know how though, since i also believed i have a clear pass.

Honestly you don't belong in game in my opinion--though I empathize with the feeling when 3 comes back to you. The hand isn't that distributional and they have half the deck. If you play spades the wrong way, they have a heart ruff available. I don't see the point of stretching to a thin non-vulnerable game when even 3 is not cold.
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#35 User is offline   aguahombre 

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Posted 2014-March-20, 00:59

View PostCyberyeti, on 2014-March-20, 00:01, said:

Jacoby has a GF element usually associated with it, that is off planet different. I play 1M-2N as sound raise to 3 or better and announce it as that, not Jacoby.

Playing something that is usually 9+ as 8+ is a bit different (particularly if they routinely invert on 4 card support as we do). Would you have old school Acol players who (change of suit) 2/1 on an 8 count alert that all the time, because you'd be laughed out of court on this side of the Atlantic, and inverting on the same as you 2/1 would not be abnormal. I reiterate, all inverted tells you is that 2m is a better hand than 3m, that is the inversion and if it's F1 you should only expect somewhere between 8+ and 11+ points as their minimum, much as you would for a non GF 2/1. Opps also weren't asked if this was some sort of deviation or routine. Inverted F1 is actually a better description than F1 as it tells you there was a weaker raise available (rather than a catchall 1N).

There is always a problem when labels and names are used as alleged disclosure. When the people who do so are using a treatment differently than it is described in most written texts, people who have read the texts are misinformed.

Forget "HCP" for a moment --- a simple 1-2 raise of a minor which is invitational to game or stronger in support strength (suit or NT unspecified) is an inverted raise in common usage. A jump raise of the minor might be truly weak or it might be mixed. These agreements are the real disclosure..not some name.

In the OP case, the opening bid itself, if within their agreed standards, is evidence enough that the Response was not invitational or better; yet it was improperly labelled as such.

We describe the simple raise as 11+ support points, which could include distribution. If Responder had held KX X XXXX KQXXX, it would have been properly described/disclosed by us in that fashion. Just that little change from the OP hand is enough that proper disclosure should steer the opponents away from a bad game in this case.

The OP hand might be invitational in Fantunes or Roth/Stone. It clearly is not invitational for the pair in question, because we can plainly see what they open 1m on. They, and others, need to stop misleading the opponents with labels and disclose what the bids are showing.
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#36 User is online   Cyberyeti 

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Posted 2014-March-20, 02:52

View Postaguahombre, on 2014-March-20, 00:59, said:

There is always a problem when labels and names are used as alleged disclosure. When the people who do so are using a treatment differently than it is described in most written texts, people who have read the texts are misinformed.

Forget "HCP" for a moment --- a simple 1-2 raise of a minor which is invitational to game or stronger in support strength (suit or NT unspecified) is an inverted raise in common usage. A jump raise of the minor might be truly weak or it might be mixed. These agreements are the real disclosure..not some name.

In the OP case, the opening bid itself, if within their agreed standards, is evidence enough that the Response was not invitational or better; yet it was improperly labelled as such.

We describe the simple raise as 11+ support points, which could include distribution. If Responder had held KX X XXXX KQXXX, it would have been properly described/disclosed by us in that fashion. Just that little change from the OP hand is enough that proper disclosure should steer the opponents away from a bad game in this case.

The OP hand might be invitational in Fantunes or Roth/Stone. It clearly is not invitational for the pair in question, because we can plainly see what they open 1m on. They, and others, need to stop misleading the opponents with labels and disclose what the bids are showing.


Opposite a 12-22 1 an invitational raise can be almost anything. If the hand had KJ instead of Kx does it suddenly become invitational ? Nobody's ever questioned our description of inverted, and this is very close to one of ours.
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#37 User is online   helene_t 

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Posted 2014-March-20, 04:35

Playing weak notrump I think an "inverted" raise on an 8-count is normal. That said, if you explain an agreement by naming a convention then I think you assume the responsibility in case opps misunderstand, unless their interpretation is crazy.

This EW pair apparently play strong notrump so "Inverted" is clearly misleading and I think NS would have had a decent chance of getting the board adjusted if they had made 10 tricks. (Assuming that 2 was not a misbid).
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#38 User is offline   ggwhiz 

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Posted 2014-March-20, 05:05

As helene says...

We play our inverted as a game force and it's played that way nearly 50-50 locally.

I have never heard an experienced player explain it without a point range here.
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#39 User is online   Cyberyeti 

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Posted 2014-March-20, 06:18

View Postggwhiz, on 2014-March-20, 05:05, said:

As helene says...

We play our inverted as a game force and it's played that way nearly 50-50 locally.

I have never heard an experienced player explain it without a point range here.


I've always heard it explained either just as "inverted" or "inverted FG"/"inverted F1". If I care, I then ask what their idea of an inverted raise is.
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#40 User is offline   MrAce 

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Posted 2014-March-20, 06:33

I find TD adjusting score comments funny to be honest.

-S could have asked their range if he was interested, he did not.

-E is allowed to make psyche or mis evaluate his hand, especially the difference between original minimum inverted minor and his bid is only 1 hcp.

-Even if you somehow proved that there was a misleading you have to convince TD that you have a reasonable 4 bid, had they alerted "it can be as low as 8 hcp" You don't have that. Just because they can be 8 hcp, shall we bid 4 ignoring the + part ? Placing all the remaining hcps for pd ? It does not work as Helene thinks it does. Misleading does not mean auto adjustment. You have to be damaged by that. You have to show that you or your pd would bid differently had you known it was not 9+ but 8+

http://www.gabrial-u...ns/INVERTED.HTM

http://en.wikipedia....Inverted_minors

I would suggest to keep the money if i was an appeal member.
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