FelicityR, on 2017-April-16, 22:54, said:
The basic rule with misfits is to stop bidding as soon as possible but if you reached 3NT with the East/West cards you'll likely to be in the same contract as other players I feel.
Without knowing the bidding, if West decides to open (rule of 19 maybe) with his shapely but ultimately poor hand, East will be thinking slam slam slam. Stopping him will be extremely difficult.
It's awkward to decide upon the exact bidding on the hands as it's likely North/South will intervene in ♥ too.
If it is at all possible can you provide the auction on the above deal and then the forum members can comment on the bids made? That may be more productive in the long run, and then we can gently suggest alternatives.
QUALIFICATION: I am departing from the original poster's parameters about the auction and trying to understand a rationale here.
This is not to pick on Felicity, but this is what is making me scratch my head....
Why would West want to open his hand? He has 1.5 quick tricks and all of the working values are in clubs. The working values in Spades are . . .ummm. . . okay.
Rule of 19 says "If the number of High Card Points added to the total of the two longest suits totals 19, the bid is acceptable within the English bridge tournaments."
8+11 = 19 so based on the rules, West can open this hand, even though we know it is a very marginal hand and is one point away from a highly unusual method ruling per English standards.
We reached and scraped and found a way to open this hand at the one level when it doesn't conform to the traditional opening requirements (2 quick tricks and 13 points). So when the original requirement doesn't work for a 1 level opening bid, let's try some others. . .
DECISION TREE for West's hand:
- Does the hand have 13 points and 2 quick tricks; we can't open -- Ignore.
- Rule of 22, too stringent for West's hand; we can't open --- Ignore.
- Rule of 20, too stringent for West's hand; we can't open --- Ignore.
- Rule of 19, ahhh just right. It's acceptable and not highly unusual and as Felicity noted it will inadvertently set up East to have the wrong expectation about the placement of the final contract.
- Rule of 18, ahhh just right. It's acceptable and not highly unusual and as Felicity noted it will inadvertently set up East to have the wrong expectation about the placement of the final contract.
Felicity never said that West will open, but the possibility exists that he could have, and if he did, I bet no one would have even batted an eye.
My point being is that bridge is very relative. It's very easy to go opinion shopping for the answer we want. We bypassed three different guidelines that said do not open, to get to the rule of 19 or the rule of 18 as a guideline that says we can open.
We can find a rule to justify an opening bid if we look hard enough, but the better question is should we?
This applies to both 1 of a suit bids and 2
♣opening bids.
We have really loosened our belts on the 1 of a suit bids and don't bat an eyelash because being the 1st to open allegedly pays handsome dividends in bridge. We have decided to accept all of the risk associated with the attendant overbids this process generates and have concluded that the collateral damage is simply unavoidable.
However, we have placed the 2
♣bid on a holy grail of disciplined bidding, but this too shall eventually pass.