Bidding twice opposite a takeout double Bidding a major then a minor, and vice versa
#1
Posted 2016-January-06, 01:24
A) you bid 1♠, LHO bids 2♥, pass, pass, you bid 3♣
B) you bid 2♣, LHO bids 2♥, pass, pass, you bid 2♠.
What does each sequence show about relative suit lengths, and which (if either) shows a stronger hand?
P.S. this conversation was sparked by the hand ♠Qxxx ♥QTx ♦void ♣KT8xxx. How would you respond to partner's double?
#2
Posted 2016-January-06, 01:49
Clubs then spades is interesting. Maybe 4♠6♣?
#3
Posted 2016-January-06, 14:36
helene_t, on 2016-January-06, 01:49, said:
How about 3-5?
#4
Posted 2016-January-06, 15:02
George Carlin
#5
Posted 2016-January-06, 15:12
lmilne, on 2016-January-06, 01:24, said:
A) you bid 1♠, LHO bids 2♥, pass, pass, you bid 3♣
B) you bid 2♣, LHO bids 2♥, pass, pass, you bid 2♠.
What does each sequence show about relative suit lengths, and which (if either) shows a stronger hand?
P.S. this conversation was sparked by the hand ♠Qxxx ♥QTx ♦void ♣KT8xxx. How would you respond to partner's double?
- (1♥) Double (Pass) 1♠; (2♥) Pass (Pass) 3♣ shows 4+ ♠s and 4+ ♣s. e.g. ♠ x x x x ♥ x x x ♦ x x ♣ A K x x
- (1♥) Double (Pass) 2♣; (2♥) Pass (Pass) 2♠ shows 4+ ♣s and 3+ ♠s. e.g. ♠ Q x x ♥ x x x ♦ x x x ♣ A Q x x
Both bids show competitive values, typically 7-8 HCP. With 9-11 you might bid 1N even without a stop.
#6
Posted 2016-January-06, 15:29
George Carlin
#7
Posted 2016-January-07, 05:41
#8
Posted 2016-January-07, 06:27
W/ the ♦ void and a known fit, I value the hand at 10 TP and would bid TWO ♠. either a 1♠ or 2♣ bid can be made w/ ZERO points as a bid is forced by the TOX, true?
If the TOX can bid again, you have game, if not, your actions have stressed the LHO's next bid.
#9
Posted 2016-January-07, 08:16
So i would bid 2♣ first, then rebid 2♠, showing a near positive hand with longer clubs.
#10
Posted 2016-January-07, 09:09
... when you respond 1S, you are to proceed under the assumption that partner has spade support and make another descriptive bid to limit the nature of your hand. 2S would be the weakest bid you could make. Your decision to bid 3C is forward going, showing club values (and usually 4+ card length). It forces to 3S at least.
... when you respond 2C, you are to proceed under the assumption that partner has club support and make another descriptive bid to limit the nature of your hand. 3C would be the weakest bid you could make. 2S is forward going and natural (value and/or length showing), but it may not be quite as good a hand as when you bid 1S first and follow it with 3C simply because 2S is "on the way" to 3C, the level your p's 2H cue bid forced the partnership to reach. If partner has 4 card spade support, partner will often raise the 2S bid or bid 3D (natural and forcing, perhaps temporizing; it is not a long strong diamond suit since partner failed to bid 2D or 3D over 2C).
With the actual hand, I would bid 2C and follow with 2S. Partner's cue bid committed the partnership to the 3C level, so there is no danger partner will call Pass after 2S. And now ...
... if partner bids 2NT, I will raise to 3NT.
... if partner bids 3C, I have enough to bid 3H or 3NT (depending on how you play 3H).
... if partner bids 3D, I will bid 3NT (show the heart values).
... if partner bids 3H, I will bid 3NT (show the heart values).
... if partner bids 3S, I will bid 4C (forcing - sniffing for slam since I could have had a working King less for 2S).
... if partner bids 4S (rare), I will pass.
#11
Posted 2016-January-07, 09:35
For everyone's convenience, these are the two auctions:
George Carlin
#12
Posted 2016-January-07, 09:47
#13
Posted 2016-January-07, 13:22
#14
Posted 2016-January-07, 14:39
gwnn, on 2016-January-06, 15:02, said:
If you were 4-4 wouldn't you just double on the second round?
#15
Posted 2016-January-07, 16:37
gnasher, on 2016-January-07, 14:39, said:
I guess you mean that we'll find the 4-4 through a scrambling 2NT from partner? I haven't thought it through a lot. I'm always a bit confused about "DSIP": when P doesn't know what I hold, how can he DSI? I guess he'd (other than 2S on four cards or a suitable three) just pass with balanced crap, bid 3m with a 5-card suit, bid 2NT with 4-4 in the minors, something like that?
I meant more situations when we bid the second suit on the 2-level, which I guess is restricted to (except if responder passes a second suit):
1C-x-p-1M
2C-p-p-2D.
George Carlin
#16
Posted 2016-January-07, 17:22
gwnn, on 2016-January-07, 16:37, said:
Yes, that, except that I don't think he should pass very often. With a 33(43) shape that merited a double of 1♥, he ought to have good enough spades to bid 2♠.
Quote
1C-x-p-1M
2C-p-p-2D.
Yes, I agree that could easily be 4-4.
#17
Posted 2016-January-07, 18:32
daffydoc, on 2016-January-07, 05:41, said:
Yes, like really. Poster is worrying about suit lengths, when the real question should be how do I do something forward going for my first bid? 1♠ is a joke for first bid! The only negative to this hand is lack of aces.
#18
Posted 2016-January-11, 05:58
daffydoc, on 2016-January-07, 05:41, said:
steve2005, on 2016-January-07, 18:32, said:
One issue is that partner might pass opposite 3♣ but raise 1♠ to 2. I hear the scoffing already, but showing our major suit can get us to games that 3♣ misses. I have some (albeit somewhat disgusted) sympathy for a 2♠ bid though!
#19
Posted 2016-January-11, 08:57
daffydoc, on 2016-January-07, 09:47, said:
There's no distortion. Partner wants us to bid a major and that's our priority. In the actual case partner largely denies 4S by passing 2H so 3C is pretty safe. Reaching 5C isn't a huge priority here, but the rebid of the minor shows a longer suit by reference.
In other instances if we had a weaker hand we'd bury the spade suit if the opponents bid to 3H by our next opportunity.
But I'm troubled by your global remark about distorting suit lengths with 5-7. The only other case I can think of is skipping diamonds after a 1C opening to show a major.
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#20
Posted 2016-January-11, 08:59
steve2005, on 2016-January-07, 18:32, said:
3C is right on values but otherwise horrible. Partner will be passing 3C with vanilla 13 counts with 4s and that's terrible.
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.