Pants on fire
#1
Posted 2011-October-25, 10:09
Handviewer link
#2
Posted 2011-October-25, 13:54
Creeksider, on 2011-October-25, 10:09, said:
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To be honest, I don't hate a 1♥ bid by North. I'm not sure I would do it, but I wouldn't say anything to my partner if he bid it. In fact, it's interesting to see GIB make a "creative" bid for lead direction and obstruction on a 4 card suit with honors. I'm a little impressed that the programmers have managed something like that.
Never tell the same lie twice. - Elim Garek on the real moral of "The boy who cried wolf"
#3
Posted 2011-October-25, 13:54
Never tell the same lie twice. - Elim Garek on the real moral of "The boy who cried wolf"
#4
Posted 2011-October-25, 21:52
#6
Posted 2011-October-25, 23:04
#7
Posted 2011-October-26, 02:44
#8
Posted 2011-October-27, 08:01
barmar, on 2011-October-26, 02:44, said:
Is this a generally accepted guideline, or merely a GIB tendency? My understanding is that you're promising 5 when you overcall, and partner should be able to rely on that promise. Am I mistaken regarding the nature of this rule? Is it something weaker, like normally expect 5 cards? We aren't talking here about some extraordinarily strong four-carder that might play as strong as a normal five-carder, so I don't see why it would make sense to put partner on a path that could lead to an unmakeable game.
#9
Posted 2011-October-27, 08:20
The main benefits are the ability of playing a good 2M partscore instead of defending some other partscore, a sign of life (encouragement for partner to bid his suit) and a nice lead direct. Also it disturbs their auction a little, something that is always welcome. It is true that sometimes partner raises too high because he expects us to have 5 (and he's right 99% of the time), those would be the bad cases.
George Carlin
#10
Posted 2011-October-27, 08:25
Creeksider, on 2011-October-27, 08:01, said:
Overcalling on a 4 card suit when you have a good hand, good suit, and length in RHO suit *is* a generally accepted stratagem by advanced+ players. Even more so at matchpoints.
I didn't realize GIB would do this - with the OP hand I think it is a winning bid and would have made it myself.
That being said .. pushing to a thin game in a 4-3 fit is a *bad* matchpoint strategy. When you find a good 4-3 fit, you have already beaten the field, there's no need to gild the lily by bidding 4.
#11
Posted 2011-October-27, 10:00
#12
Posted 2011-October-27, 10:37
Handviewer link
#13
Posted 2011-October-27, 10:54
George Carlin
#14
Posted 2011-October-27, 17:12
Creeksider, on 2011-October-27, 10:37, said:
Handviewer link
You did two things to earn your good score, but disrupting their auction was not really one of them: you defended well (I presume) because you set 3♦ whereas others allowed it to make, but primarily what you did was avoid making a takeout double, which leads to a disaster.
Should we start a new thread to ask about that 3♣ bid?
http://online.bridge...username=myprac
#15
Posted 2011-October-27, 17:22
#16
Posted 2011-October-27, 17:47
Creeksider, on 2011-October-27, 10:00, said:
Which is not much different from humans. If you ask any bridge player what an overcall shows, they'll say a 5-card suit. And their partners generally respond as if that's what they expect, raising with 3 and competing to the 3 level with 4. The point is that sometimes judgement tells you to diverge from your agreements. It's only a slight deviation, so it's not a psyche.
I'm sure there's a couple of paragraphs in Lawrence's book on overcalls about it.
#17
Posted 2011-October-27, 21:52
Creeksider, on 2011-October-27, 10:00, said:
Is this something that was added in the last update or two? I cannot find any four-card overcalls before these, and I think this is something that someone would have pointed out somewhere along the line.
#18
Posted 2011-October-28, 00:15
Opponents overcalling on 4 card suits at the one level (and 70%+ of the time paying the price) is what helped me get through college without worrying about where the rent or my next meal was coming from. But I admit the opponents standard of declarer play was generally not that hot, but then neither was mine.
They often lost control in the play when their partner raised on 3 - especially when playing in a 3-3 fit after being forced as they did not have the declarer skills to handle even a 4-3 fit or just as often ended up declaring a hand when it was better to defend.
If their declaring skills for 4-3 fits were up to the job, then their defending skills were also at a higher level and so would usually benefit from defending with defensive hands!
If all you have to say is to use a 4 card suit overcall on a hand unsuited to double for takeout, you basically have a defensive hand unsuited to a 1NT overcall and can pass and wait for a decent partner to protect if it is your sides hand.
Yes, I know being declarer gives you an significant edge at bridge but unless you are Ron Klinger or a member of the Italian Blue team with outsize declaring skills you often end up declaring more often with a hand better suited to defend with.
Yes, I have played at a bridge club where some players just can't defend for toffee or just hate defending - so they overcall with abandon and so end up losing that way instead most of the time.
Sputnik doubles existed even in my youth and so it was not really much disruption to overcall at the one level even with 1 spade.
Overcalling on 4 card suits at the one level carries bidding frequency benefits as opposed to bridge value. For some the this carries a high psychological value and this seems to outweigh, for them, the actual bridge benefit.
It is this longstanding habit of employing 4 card overcalls without the associated declarer skills that continues to fill my wallet when playing for profit - the happy days just go on and on.
Thanks for the money.
calm01
#20
Posted 2011-October-28, 01:05
George Carlin