What's your plan? Assume (if you wish) that you were playing with your regular partner, not a robot.
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Yeah, this happened What do you bid?
#1
Posted 2024-November-20, 09:19
IMPs. 2nd Seat. (If it matters, playing vs robots)
What's your plan? Assume (if you wish) that you were playing with your regular partner, not a robot.
What's your plan? Assume (if you wish) that you were playing with your regular partner, not a robot.
#2
Posted 2024-November-20, 09:26
6S punt. I dont see that we have room to do anything intelligent.
Desperate times call for desperate measures.
Desperate times call for desperate measures.
"And no matter what methods you play, it is essential, for anyone aspiring to learn to be a good player, to learn the importance of bidding shape properly." MikeH
#3
Posted 2024-November-20, 09:48
5♦ if partner does nothing other than 5♥ I bid 6♠, if they bid a black suit I bid the grand, the interesting question is what I do if they bid 6♥, prob just bid 6♠.
#4
Posted 2024-November-20, 10:26
the interesting question is what I do if when they bid 6♥, prob just bid 6♠.
FYP
FYP
"And no matter what methods you play, it is essential, for anyone aspiring to learn to be a good player, to learn the importance of bidding shape properly." MikeH
#5
Posted 2024-November-20, 10:27
Cyberyeti, on 2024-November-20, 09:48, said:
5♦ if partner does nothing other than 5♥ I bid 6♠, if they bid a black suit I bid the grand, the interesting question is what I do if they bid 6♥, prob just bid 6♠.
I like the 5!D suggestion
Identifying a fit is really important
Agree with 6!S over 5!H
Alderaan delenda est
#6
Posted 2024-November-20, 10:27
Perhaps 5nt pick a slam (raising 6♣ to 7♣ and bidding 7♠ otherwise).
Adam W. Meyerson
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#8
Posted 2024-November-21, 02:00
I bid 6♠, the same as what jillybean and pilowsky stated in their replies.
--- It lost me a few IMPs because other players in South position jumped straight to 7♠.
--- I checked later: approx. 50% were in 6♠, 30%-35% in 7♠ and most others were in 4♠/5♠.
If I was playing with a regular partner, I would have considered bidding 5♦. However, I probably would land up bidding a direct 6♠. awm's 5NT sounds better than 5♦ but it did not even occur to me during the session.
North had ♠10x ♥AKQ9xx ♦xx ♣J98. When trumps split 3-1 and clubs were not 5-0, 7♠ rolled in without even needing those heart winners.
--- It lost me a few IMPs because other players in South position jumped straight to 7♠.
--- I checked later: approx. 50% were in 6♠, 30%-35% in 7♠ and most others were in 4♠/5♠.
If I was playing with a regular partner, I would have considered bidding 5♦. However, I probably would land up bidding a direct 6♠. awm's 5NT sounds better than 5♦ but it did not even occur to me during the session.
North had ♠10x ♥AKQ9xx ♦xx ♣J98. When trumps split 3-1 and clubs were not 5-0, 7♠ rolled in without even needing those heart winners.
#9
Posted Yesterday, 09:31
I think this auction offers us a good chance to have a solid theoretical discussion. Here are a pair of questions I think need to be addressed before choosing an action:
1. What are the differences between (4♦) - 5NT - 6♥; 6♠, (4♦) - 5♦ - 5♥; 6♠ and (4♦) - 5♦ - 5♥; 5NT?
2a. How do you play a 4NT overcall?
2b. If the answer to 2a is some kind of takeout (as opposed to natural or some kind of Blackwood), what are (4♦) - 4NT - 5♥; 6♠ and (4♦) - 4NT - 5♥; 5NT?
For the methods I advocate, the direct 5NT seems like the correct call here. Playing Standard though, the (4♦) - 5♦ - 5♥; 5NT auction seems like the right one if this is PaS and (4♦) - 5♦ - 5♥; 6♠ ought to be right if it is GSF, which I suspect is still the default for most pairs. Since there is more than one set of agreements possible, despite the cramped bidding room, I think the answers need to be part of the response so we can understand why the alternatives are less good.
1. What are the differences between (4♦) - 5NT - 6♥; 6♠, (4♦) - 5♦ - 5♥; 6♠ and (4♦) - 5♦ - 5♥; 5NT?
2a. How do you play a 4NT overcall?
2b. If the answer to 2a is some kind of takeout (as opposed to natural or some kind of Blackwood), what are (4♦) - 4NT - 5♥; 6♠ and (4♦) - 4NT - 5♥; 5NT?
For the methods I advocate, the direct 5NT seems like the correct call here. Playing Standard though, the (4♦) - 5♦ - 5♥; 5NT auction seems like the right one if this is PaS and (4♦) - 5♦ - 5♥; 6♠ ought to be right if it is GSF, which I suspect is still the default for most pairs. Since there is more than one set of agreements possible, despite the cramped bidding room, I think the answers need to be part of the response so we can understand why the alternatives are less good.
(-: Zel :-)
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