Plan the Auction MP, AKJ9x Q9 KQ KJxx in 3rd chair
#1
Posted 2010-August-19, 18:06
If it matters, it's a STAC game (so you're shooting for a very high percentage if possible) and this is the second board of the session (first board was AVG+ for you). The field is fairly weak (club game) and both you and partner are substantially stronger than the field average (although there are a few good players scattered about). Opponents are roughly average relative to the field.
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#2
Posted 2010-August-19, 18:44
#3
Posted 2010-August-19, 18:46
Put me down for 1♠--> 2N. Opening 2N looks to be an overbid. A lot of your answers like opening 2♣ are filler - is there a reason to have a minimum number of poll choices?
I know you want a big game, but overbidding on the 2nd board doesn't look like the right way to go about that.
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#4
Posted 2010-August-19, 20:13

#5
Posted 2010-August-19, 20:57
#6
Posted 2010-August-20, 05:52
3N rebid is a totally different type of hand
as a few ppl said, partner will also know we want a big score and he will bid 3n if appropriate.
#8
Posted 2010-August-21, 00:16
♠Qx
♥xxx
♦xxxx
♣AT9x
As you can see, 4♠ is basically on a two-way guess in clubs. Bidding 1♠...3N (what I tried at the table) goes down three because RHO leads a heart from AJxxxx and opponents take the first six heart tricks plus the diamond ace. Bidding 1♠...2N obtains a slightly better down two. Opening 2N gets you a diamond lead ("right" siding the contract) and you can make 3N+1 if you guess the clubs. Opening 1♠ and rebidding 3♣ might get you to 4♠.
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#9
Posted 2010-August-21, 02:20

With pard's hand he might bid 4♠ or 5♣ over that. Probably spades, since it's MPs.
#10
Posted 2010-August-21, 05:02
#11
Posted 2010-August-21, 05:21
fromageGB, on Aug 21 2010, 12:02 PM, said:
And he puts down xx Axxx Jxxx xxx.
The reason that 4♠ is OK (and it's no more than that) opposite a 6-count is because everythng he has is working flat out - even ♣9 is necesssary.
#12
Posted 2010-August-21, 05:59
#13
Posted 2010-August-21, 08:13
fromageGB, on Aug 21 2010, 12:59 PM, said:
OK, that was an extreme example. Here's a less extreme one: Qx xxxx A109x xxx. Would you have the same auction?
If so, it seems to me that by bidding 4♠ as opener you're reaching a set of games that range from dreadful to about 50%. That doesn't sound like a good strategy.
#14
Posted 2010-August-21, 09:00
#15
Posted 2010-August-22, 10:22
gnasher, on Aug 21 2010, 03:13 PM, said:
If so, it seems to me that by bidding 4♠ as opener you're reaching a set of games that range from dreadful to about 50%. That doesn't sound like a good strategy.
Sorry, I'll come clean. I would not actually bid 4♠ but didn't want to get to bogged down in the details of my probably non-standard methods, so simplified my post, the purpose of which was just to propose 2♣ (forcing) as an alternative initial rebid.
When I rebid 2♣ partner knows I am either balanced, have 4+ clubs, or any hand 17+. The response with a typical 8 count would be to bid 2♦ to find out, and with a weaker hand would make another bid. 2♠ could be a 6/7 count with 2 spades, or perhaps weaker than that with 3 spades (a normal 7+ hand would bid 2♠ initially).
If I had just the minimum sort of hand, maybe 17 up to 19, I would pass his 2♠ rebid. This hand I reckon possibly comes into the area of "it's worth another try", so might bid 3♣ therefore showing a 19/20+ sort of hand with a 4+ card club suit. With the given partner's hand, good clubs and a doubleton queen of spades, 4♠ from him seems a quite easy bid, with the 2 suited fit, maximum for the 2♠ bid, no wasted values.
On your example Qx xxxx AT9x xxx I'd say partner's choice was between 3♠ and 4♠, as I take 3♦ to be to play. I wouldn't blame partner for 4♠, as I am at the bottom end of my continuation after his sign-off. OK, Perhaps my initial decision to go on after his denial was faulty - it was certainly borderline. I'll apologise and go one off.
#16
Posted 2010-August-22, 10:33
hanp, on Aug 21 2010, 09:00 AM, said:
Good question. Played the same STAC, and wish I had lied or miscounted my spades. If I had rebid 3NT instead of 2NT, partner would have pulled to the alleged 6-2 fit

Also, IMHO, this hand is closer to a downgrade than an upgrade. I almost rebid 2C, which would have scored a whole lot of matchpoints.
This post has been edited by aguahombre: 2010-August-22, 10:38
#17
Posted 2010-August-22, 11:13
awm, on Aug 20 2010, 01:06 AM, said:
OK, this is totally off-topic, but I was interested by this post.
As I understand a STAC is what I would call a simultaneous pairs, where a large number of people in clubs across the region all play the same hands, and the aim is to get the highest percentage.
I play in these when I can, and I've got the top score or near top score in the country a few times, playing in similar circumstances ("The field is fairly weak (club game) and both you and partner are substantially stronger than the field average (although there are a few good players scattered about"). We don't do this by "shooting" for huge boards. The trick is to avoid the very poor boards and take everything you are given.
(Maybe we'd do better if we did more shooting. But I doubt it. It's fairly common to be dealt 70%+ session in a club game, what's also common is to give some of it away through avoidable errors).
#18
Posted 2010-August-22, 11:31
♥Q9
♦KQ
♣KJxx
♠Qx
♥xxx
♦xxxx
♣AT9x
1S - 1NT
3C - ??
RKC "showing" ; w/4+Cl
4C = 0 ( or 3 improbable )
- 4D = 1 ( or 4 impossible )
4H ( 4oM) = 2 - cQ
4NT = 2 + cQ
4S ( No slam intentions missing 2 key cards ) Responder is happy to pass;
but Responder's pass is mandatory after Sp game sign-off
since 3C maybe artificial w/6+Sp.... needing a forcing bid.
4S Still no cakewalk... needs to find the ♣Q.
#19
Posted 2010-August-22, 11:34
The one observation that might be relevant to this board is that much of the club field will probably bid game on this hand with 19 hcp opposite a response. Even if game is relatively lousy, some of them will probably make it because of poor defense. I'm not convinced that bidding conservatively is that likely to pay off here; you land yourself in a partial when the field may be in game, and this tends to nullify your superior declarer play.
I'd say that playing in a STAC, I tend to take a few more risks than in a regular club game. I wouldn't say it's "wild swinging" but my feeling is that waiting for 70+% games to come around just by playing normal bridge is not all that high percentage even in a club field.
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#20
Posted 2010-August-22, 12:12
I suspect he and his partner simply evaluated each hand better than the rest of the field, whether high or low or different strain -- plus playing and defending well.
I don't remember whether the given hand was from the session he won.