IMPs with random BBO opponents.
My very bad bid
#1
Posted 2014-October-08, 11:05
IMPs with random BBO opponents.
#2
Posted 2014-October-08, 11:09
2♥ isn't terrible but it's likely to get you into the wrong strain. Pass could work out too.
#3
Posted 2014-October-08, 11:37
I think pass is very bad and 2nt is quite bad. 2♥ is not terrible but with a 5332 13-count partner might have passed 1nt, and 5143 is more likely than 5341 now that hearts is my long suit.
#4
Posted 2014-October-08, 12:17
As for what to bid, 2♠ is a 'wtp' choice.
Pass is silly for multiple reasons, including:
1) a 5-2 is probably better/safer than a 4-3, especially with 2 honours in spades
2) partner may be just short of a jumpshift and will bid again over 2♠. If so, then game is a strong favourite and is unreachable after pass
2♥ is silly because partner should pass it with a stiff, which will not result in a good contract. It is how you bid with a bad 6 card suit. Now, some might argue that you can't hold 6+ hearts and not have pre-empted, but that isn't good bridge. Imagine x Jxxxxxx Kx Qxx.
2n is a gross overbid.
so 2♠ is a standout bid.
I'm not sure which of 2N or 2♥ would qualify as the one of the worst bids he'd ever seen....they are horrible but he's led a sheltered life if he hasn't seen worse. Of course, maybe you did worse Technically, passing isn't a bid, btw.
#5
Posted 2014-October-08, 12:50
diamonds (5332) so passing 2d is just as scary if not more so than converting to 2s
which conceivably could be into a 42 spade fit (though never if you always have
at least 5 opposite a passed hand--strongly recommended). This hand could easily be
a mild misfit and treating it as invitational or better is a huge overbid.
#6
Posted 2014-October-08, 12:51
2NT is a gross overbid and would be a candidate for worst bid seen.
#7
Posted 2014-October-08, 13:01
gszes, on 2014-October-08, 12:50, said:
No, if you open 1♠ on a 4-card suit in third seat it is with the intention to pass any response. So the rebid confirms 5+ spades.
#8
Posted 2014-October-08, 13:02
Quote
Agree.
-gwnn
#9
Posted 2014-October-08, 13:46
#10
Posted 2014-October-08, 14:24
#11
Posted 2014-October-08, 14:42
#12
Posted 2014-October-08, 15:00
Edit: Seriously? Within an hour of my post someone voted for 2♥??
This post has been edited by Bbradley62: 2014-October-08, 16:02
#13
Posted 2014-October-08, 15:15
2♠ is easily my first choice, and Pass is second. A good rule of thumb here is you should have at least 2 more cards in the second suit than the first in order to pass, or 1 more card if you have 4+ more HCP in that suit.
EDIT - I agree that 1NT should only be Semi-Forcing by a Passed Hand.
"Learn from the mistakes of others. You won't live long enough to make them all yourself."
"One advantage of bad bidding is that you get practice at playing atrocious contracts."
-Alfred Sheinwold
#14
Posted 2014-October-08, 15:28
So, if any call you may have reasonably made is the worst call partner's ever seen, he's never won an individual...
#16
Posted 2014-October-08, 22:07
If partner has 4 ♦, then you have a known 5-2 ♠ fit and a 4-3 ♦ fit. It's usually better to play in the 5-2 fit.
#17
Posted 2014-October-08, 22:58
If my hand was weak (xx Jxxxx Qxx Kxx for example), I would have bid 2S in a flash, and hope it goes all pass. But my hand is stronger than that minimum, and I can dream that partner might have better than a minimum too. Suppose opener has something like Axxxx QJx AKxx x (or possibly Kxxxx Qxxx AKJx void). A 2♠ bid by me will end the auction, and we might eek out a plus there, but I would much rather be in 4♥. I can also imagine hands that would play well in 3NT (with a helpful contribution from my ♠JT), but partner needs to hear something forward going from me to get there. If opener has the dreaded stiff ♥ and a minimum, there will still be no problem if he does not panic about a possible misfit and pass ensuring a misfit, but bids again instead. After making what I consider to be a mildly forward going bid, I can happily pass if opener rebids his 5 card ♠ suit, and no harm would have been done by my shot at finding a good ♥ fit on the way to a sell out at 2♠. If this is a real misfit and I have the weak hand that wanted to play in 2♥, then I can rebid the suit and partner can pass with a stiff, knowing that he too did his best to avoid a bad situation. Getting one trick higher in a misfit is not desirable, but I think the possible gain from treating the 2♥ bid as forward going with a 5 card suit outweighs the possible risk.
After a few more replies, I will post partner's hand too so all can see how my 2♥ bid turned out. Hint, it was not pretty.
#18
Posted 2014-October-08, 23:13
silvr bull, on 2014-October-08, 22:58, said:
If my hand was weak (xx Jxxxx Qxx Kxx for example), I would have bid 2S in a flash, and hope it goes all pass. But my hand is stronger than that minimum, and I can dream that partner might have better than a minimum too. Suppose opener has something like Axxxx QJx AKxx x (or possibly Kxxxx Qxxx AKJx void). A 2♠ bid by me will end the auction, and we might eek out a plus there, but I would much rather be in 4♥. I can also imagine hands that would play well in 3NT (with a helpful contribution from my ♠JT), but partner needs to hear something forward going from me to get there. If opener has the dreaded stiff ♥ and a minimum, there will still be no problem if he does not panic about a possible misfit and pass ensuring a misfit, but bids again instead. After making what I consider to be a mildly forward going bid, I can happily pass if opener rebids his 5 card ♠ suit, and no harm would have been done by my shot at finding a good ♥ fit on the way to a sell out at 2♠. If this is a real misfit and I have the weak hand that wanted to play in 2♥, then I can rebid the suit and partner can pass with a stiff, knowing that he too did his best to avoid a bad situation. Getting one trick higher in a misfit is not desirable, but I think the possible gain from treating the 2♥ bid as forward going with a 5 card suit outweighs the possible risk.
After a few more replies, I will post partner's hand too so all can see how my 2♥ bid turned out. Hint, it was not pretty.
You are guilty of allowing what you hold to influence your understanding of what 2♥ means. You'd like it to be constructive with 5 hearts. It isn't. Wishing it were doesn't make it so. The fact that you can construct hands on which partner will have bid 2♦ and 4♥ is a good contract is a snare and illusion. Until you learn that, you will never become a good bidder. You have to accept the limitations of whatever system you have agreed to play...and every system has limitations, every single one. In standard, 2♥ is a weak to constructive hand with 6+ hearts, and since you are a passed hand, that says your suit isn't appropriate for a weak 2. Partner is usually going to pass. If he bids, then he was going to bid over 2♠ so you were worried about the wrong thing. He will not be rebidding a 5 card spade suit and you are deluding yourself, again, when you entertain that possibility. At least, not if he has any basic understanding of bidding.
#19
Posted 2014-October-09, 04:05
#20
Posted 2014-October-09, 04:35
mikeh, on 2014-October-08, 23:13, said:
and continue "and from this we infer that it is usually a 6-card suit". 2♥ essentially suggests misfits in opener's suits. But if you cannot bid 2♥ with a 5-card suit, what will you do with a 1-5-2-5 hand after 2♦ from opener? Let him play 2♦ in a 4-2 fit? 2♠ in a 5-1 fit? Bid 2NT with 8 HCP or less? Or will you play 2♥ which is probably good?
Opposite a partner who has exactly 5 spades and denied 4 hearts, I expect the following number of cards in hearts:
3 (42.4 %)
2 (38.3 %)
1 (16.6 %)
0 ( 2.7 %)
2♥ seems to do good rather than harm in most cases, so if we bid 2♠ instead of 2♥ the reason is not so much that 2♥ is such a bad bid but that 2♠ is what most players expect us to do with a doubleton in ♠, and that I don't risk upsetting partner just in case he's really short in hearts. And yes, because partner may still have a 6-card ♠ suit. Yet, once we agreed that 2♥ CAN be a 5-card suit given the circumstances, the reason for failing to open 2♥ may be right that it actually IS a 5-card suit, so opener should be alerted.
From what I have read so far, I guess N hat a hand such as (a) 5-0-5-3 or (b) 6-0-4-3, passed, and things went real weird. In that case I would say - twisting your words again, Mike - N was "guilty of allowing what you [N] hold to influence your understanding of what 2♥ [by S] means." Actually, if I were N and the dummy came down after I passed 2♥ with hand (a), well, partner plays, so I get myself a snack and welcome the next board . With hand (b) I would bid 2♠ over 2♥ and cross fingers.
By the way, with that hand of yours,
mikeh, on 2014-October-08, 12:17, said:
I think I would open 2♥. I am aware this is not a system bid and I am aware this may go wrong sometimes. But I think partner will usually do the right thing (trying to assess my strength) while opponents will usually miscount the tricks. So I expect it will do more good than bad.