Teams. What's your call? 3m is a signoff. We play non-promissory Stayman, so 2♠ would be a NF invite normally with 4♠s. So 3♥ is your only direct invite that also tells P of a fit.
Invite game?
#1
Posted 2014-November-20, 12:21
Teams. What's your call? 3m is a signoff. We play non-promissory Stayman, so 2♠ would be a NF invite normally with 4♠s. So 3♥ is your only direct invite that also tells P of a fit.
#2
Posted 2014-November-20, 12:39
No guarantees, but it rates to be the percentage auction.
#3
Posted 2014-November-20, 14:53
"It's only when a mosquito lands on your testicles that you realize there is always a way to solve problems without using violence!"
"Well to be perfectly honest, in my humble opinion, of course without offending anyone who thinks differently from my point of view, but also by looking into this matter in a different perspective and without being condemning of one's view's and by trying to make it objectified, and by considering each and every one's valid opinion, I honestly believe that I completely forgot what I was going to say."
#4
Posted 2014-November-20, 15:24
#5
Posted 2014-November-20, 16:33
Meanwhile, apart from the imp odds and the advantage of being on play after a relatively uninformative auction, we minimize the risk of getting doubled when things are really bad for us. When you bid tentatively and the opps can see that things sit badly, they basically get a risk-free double, since they can deduce that you were hoping/needing things to sit well. When you blast with confidence, the opps may think that the bad breaks are what will prevent the overtrick, rather than get the set.
#6
Posted 2014-November-21, 01:03
mikeh, on 2014-November-20, 16:33, said:
Meanwhile, apart from the imp odds and the advantage of being on play after a relatively uninformative auction, we minimize the risk of getting doubled when things are really bad for us. When you bid tentatively and the opps can see that things sit badly, they basically get a risk-free double, since they can deduce that you were hoping/needing things to sit well. When you blast with confidence, the opps may think that the bad breaks are what will prevent the overtrick, rather than get the set.
Also, an invitational auction is more likely to attract a trump lead.
#7
Posted 2014-November-21, 02:08
We would be competing against 2H by South with a trump lead on:
1C-1S
1N-2H. Does our probable small gain which we already figure to have change the NV IMP odds on bidding this game?
Then again, North will be declaring 4H if he has five of them.
If that is the case we must blast 4 here. Can our North have five hearts for the 12-14 NT?
#8
Posted 2014-November-21, 06:02
#9
Posted 2014-November-22, 05:20
Quote
It was actually from bidding practice
#10
Posted 2014-November-22, 08:12
#11
Posted 2014-November-22, 11:07
Jinksy, on 2014-November-22, 05:20, said:
You passed 2♥? Or did you mean "invited"?
"It's only when a mosquito lands on your testicles that you realize there is always a way to solve problems without using violence!"
"Well to be perfectly honest, in my humble opinion, of course without offending anyone who thinks differently from my point of view, but also by looking into this matter in a different perspective and without being condemning of one's view's and by trying to make it objectified, and by considering each and every one's valid opinion, I honestly believe that I completely forgot what I was going to say."
#12
Posted 2014-November-22, 16:06
#13
Posted 2014-November-22, 17:45
#14
Posted 2014-November-22, 18:19
Jinksy, on 2014-November-22, 17:45, said:
I don't really know how to think about hands like this. It's easy to visualise hands opposite that make game poor, and easy to visualise hands that will make it excellent. How do you tell which are more likely and by approximately how much?
Why do you feel the need to think about these hands?
In team match you bid the game and try to make it, because the bonus for playing and making game is way too big to ignore with a hand like this. Unless you are swinging. You know they will play this game. Why are you trying to make simulations in your head and waste your energy for it when you know very well that there will be hands where game is poor and where game is excellent spot and all you doing is to waste your energy. Save your energy, believe me you will need it. Imho, looking at the hands you posted, or Eagles123 posted, you are working hard to put your signature in the bidding each time it comes to you. This is also very frustrating for your pds. Even though it may not be your intention, it may eventually look like as if you are stepping on your pd, selfishly, and take actions to put you on spotlight. Perhaps we all went through this phase, but the sooner you start playing bridge, the sooner you may get better results, because this will make positive effects on your pd and you will be using your focus on things that actually makes a huge difference at the table rather than actions like this where the outcome is extremely random or worse than random.
Cheers!
"It's only when a mosquito lands on your testicles that you realize there is always a way to solve problems without using violence!"
"Well to be perfectly honest, in my humble opinion, of course without offending anyone who thinks differently from my point of view, but also by looking into this matter in a different perspective and without being condemning of one's view's and by trying to make it objectified, and by considering each and every one's valid opinion, I honestly believe that I completely forgot what I was going to say."
#15
Posted 2014-November-22, 18:38
Jinksy, on 2014-November-22, 17:45, said:
Try a simulation KD4970Y: I got
4♥-1 4%
4♥= 52%
4♥+1 33%
4♥ +2 11%
I removed those hands where the stayman bid might be doubled and where there was a guess I tended towards getting it wrong otherwise the % would be even more convincing.
Oct 2006: Mission impossible
Soon: Mission illegal
#16
Posted 2014-November-22, 18:44
#17
Posted 2014-November-22, 19:35
MrAce, on 2014-November-22, 18:19, said:
In team match you bid the game and try to make it, because the bonus for playing and making game is way too big to ignore with a hand like this. Unless you are swinging. You know they will play this game. Why are you trying to make simulations in your head and waste your energy for it when you know very well that there will be hands where game is poor and where game is excellent spot and all you doing is to waste your energy. Save your energy, believe me you will need it. Imho, looking at the hands you posted, or Eagles123 posted, you are working hard to put your signature in the bidding each time it comes to you. This is also very frustrating for your pds. Even though it may not be your intention, it may eventually look like as if you are stepping on your pd, selfishly, and take actions to put you on spotlight. Perhaps we all went through this phase, but the sooner you start playing bridge, the sooner you may get better results, because this will make positive effects on your pd and you will be using your focus on things that actually makes a huge difference at the table rather than actions like this where the outcome is extremely random or worse than random.
Cheers!
If you can give me a heuristic for how not to do what you think I'm doing, I'll at least try following it for a few hands and see what happens. That said, you might be overestimating my intuitive judgement - here I just saw a hand with very weak trumps and quick outside losers and passed mindlessly, then only had reason to think about it after I found we'd missed a solid game (P had something like Axx Axxxx xx KQJ).
I don't agree about game bonus being overwhelming, though - I think you need close to 50% expectation of making 10 tricks here. IIRC you'd want about 45% normally (after allowing for possible doubles and down twos), and if as PhantomSac thinks this is a choice between 2 and 4, the increased relative difference of making only 8 tricks is going to be a factor.
#18
Posted 2014-November-22, 19:48
PhantomSac, on 2014-November-22, 18:44, said:
Yeah. Perhaps like me he overlooked the yellow coding. Certainly makes the decision to PASS at least more in the ballpark.
I do agree with MA here, however, that at teams you know the other table is bidding game. (Also, whereagles is right regarding 7L opposite 7L)
Now . . . if you know your opponents to be super conservative or something, there may be something to be said for following along with them in staying low too.
#19
Posted 2014-November-22, 20:00
Jinksy, on 2014-November-22, 19:35, said:
The fact that P made game with this highly unsuitable (albeit MAX) hand . . . .
You bemoan the fact that you cannot give or get information to make bidding game intelligent (or not). Yet on these two hands . . . short of seeing the full hands . . . upon exchange of the most pertinent information (the club void) you and partner will stop short of a sound game.
Which, although just one hand, is a strong argument for just bidding game here.
#20
Posted 2014-November-22, 20:39
Jinksy, on 2014-November-22, 19:35, said:
You're gonna laugh at me but 9 points + 3 for the void with 4 trumps and an 8 card fit. I think that's GOREN? (add infinite with a 9 card fit and 4 trumps for a void). That gets you to 12, your partner has 12-14, so in support points you probably have an invite. However since the downsides of inviting (can't show your shortness, may induce them to double when things are bad, more likely to induce a trump lead, etc) outweigh the gains (stopping in 3H opposite a minimum), just bid game.
If you really want some way to quantify what to do here, I think using support points is fine (+1 for doubleton, +2 for singleton, +3 for void with 8 trumps. With 9 trumps +1 +3 +5. Add less if you have only 3 trumps, 3 trumps and a void def not worth +5 obviously, even opp a 6 card suit.) So with a singleton and 7 points and 4 trumps you have a minimum limit raise opp a 1M opener, etc, it's really not that far off from accurate.