The third law of thermodynamics...
#1
Posted 2013-December-29, 04:41
I can disprove it. These hands achieved an absolute zero.
AKJ
Axxx
KQx
Axx
Starting with partner.
2C 2D
2NT 4C
4H ?
2C was precision, 2D enquired, 2NT showed a max(13-15 or so), 4C was RKCB, 4H showed 0 or 3. Which your abacus tells you is a lie. How do you proceed?
#2
Posted 2013-December-29, 06:34
Disclaimer: this may obvious to me because I know the hand.
#3
Posted 2013-December-29, 06:56
I would just bid what I was always going to bid (unless I would find out something good) : 6NT.
Rik
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the new discoveries, is not Eureka! (I found it!), but Thats funny Isaac Asimov
The only reason God did not put "Thou shalt mind thine own business" in the Ten Commandments was that He thought that it was too obvious to need stating. - Kenberg
#4
Posted 2013-December-29, 07:47
George Carlin
#5
Posted 2013-December-29, 07:49
not 2
not 2
2 without the queen
2 with the queen
lately she has been messing with the last 2 answers as well, so now its totally random.
#7
Posted 2013-December-29, 13:16
If the first, disregarding the UI from PhilKing , I agree with Trinidad: Partner most likely has a holding that would respond 5♥ to 4NT RKC.
#8
Posted 2013-December-29, 16:40
If partner really has no keys, we are not dead yet, maybe the club king is onside. Not a completely crazy contract.
If partner meant to show two keys w/o, we can hope that we, and especially those in 7, get the clubs wrong.
#9
Posted 2013-December-29, 18:12
Also - just for clarification, 2N denies a 4 card major and confirms a 6th club in addition to promising a maximum?
#10
Posted 2013-December-30, 00:25
#11
Posted 2013-December-30, 04:04
I would also bid 6NT on the basis that it's more likely he has miscounted than something warped as happened and anyway if that is his hand it's on a finesse. (Although if that is his hand maybe we should bid 6H!)
Another possibility is that he has forgotten 4C is keycard and thinks it has just set clubs as trumps, and he's cuing the heart king. That means we are off the DA and is a more obvious 6NT bid.
#12
Posted 2013-December-30, 05:50
This post has been edited by Lord Molyb: 2013-December-30, 06:10
#14
Posted 2013-December-30, 07:30
-gwnn
#15
Posted 2013-December-30, 09:12
mr1303, on 2013-December-30, 00:25, said:
I'm glad that Akwoo asked about this because I had assumed the majors are out of the question. (I don't play Precision so I just went with the low as I understood it to be.)
Still, I think that as it has gone, if partner has four hearts that's just too bad. Now is not the time to explore for that. I am sticking with 6NT.
These situations can put a strain on partnerships. My general view is that it is best to assume partner means what he says, but I think that if he indeed has the no key weirdo and if 6NT goes down while 5♣, and maybe 6♥, is making, he should be forgiving. We should expect our partners to pay attention and think carefully, but we must allow them to be wrong.
#16
Posted 2013-December-30, 11:57
- You can't win.
- You can't break even.
- You can't leave the game.
I'm still waiting for the passout throughout. I've seen it in a 3-table game, but never higher.
#17
Posted 2013-December-30, 13:16
mistakes so just do the best you can with the known information and take a guess (ackkk)
at what is the best way to proceed. Once you have done this forget about it and move on.
You can always discuss situations where you were "lost" in the bidding later but for now just
go to the bext board and get a top by playing that hand vs this one over and over and overrrrrrrrrr
IMHO I would just bid 6N since using the logic that if I am going to gamble I am going to go for
the best reasonable score I can expect to get:)))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))
#18
Posted 2013-December-30, 15:58
Was surprised 6C was no matchpoints either though. There's usually 1 pair who don't bid a slam....
#20
Posted 2014-January-02, 10:26
mr1303, on 2013-December-30, 15:58, said:
Was surprised 6C was no matchpoints either though. There's usually 1 pair who don't bid a slam....
If you're going to bid 6♣ at MP here, I'd just try 6NT instead. You've got a balanced 21 count opposite a good Precision 2♣ opener. It could be that the same finesse that allows 6♣ to make also allows 6NT to make.
I presume you strongly suspected that something had gone wrong with the auction by this point but think back to what your first thoughts could have been at MP when hearing PD's opening 2♣ and looking at your balanced 21 count, and that should be 6NT.