Lead-directing doubles
#1
Posted 2022-December-02, 19:21
But at the half, we had a useful lead.
And then, early in the second half, I heard a Jacoby transfer 2♦ on my right. I held KJxxx in the suit, and it seemed a good idea to double. Redoubled, making 4. We still won the match. As I said, our teammates were very good.
That was a life lesson for me. Two lessons actually. First, be certain you want the lead. Second, be sure you have enough solidity in the suit to stop the second overtrick.
But then came the last quarter this year's Soloway semifinals. A player on the team with the lead heard a Kokish auction 2♣- 2♦; 2♥- 2♠ ending on his right. He held AJxxx and out. He doubled. -1040.
And then, in the last quarter of the Soloway finals, a player (with the lead again!) heard 2♣- 2♦ and chose to double with KJ9xx . He had two queens and a jack on the side, so there was only one redoubled overtrick. Still, a 7 imp loss.
Clearly, experts today disagree with my life lessons.
Does this really win on balance?
#2
Posted 2022-December-03, 04:59
- Set their contract on the suggested lead.
- Not set it on a different lead.
- Partner needs to not have been planning to lead your suit in the first place.
There are some good stories of auctions such as (1♥)-P-(3♦* 9-11 4(+) hearts)-X; (...pause)3♥ - a.p. where opener was dissuaded from a cold game because of diamond weakness in their hand, but keep in mind this is a rare situation (opponents have already shown a 9-card fit so there is some law protection, also partner is near guaranteed to be on lead). Plus, even on this auction experienced pairs will have agreements about pass and redouble (for me: both are positive, weaker than 4♥ but stronger than 3♥ or a slam try, and pass shows diamond length while redouble shows shortness) so they might gain from your double anyway.
#3
Posted 2022-December-03, 05:04
#4
Posted 2022-December-03, 05:59
5 card suits should have a 10 with two honors, and six card suits should have at least two honors imo. It does not guarantee that the opps. will XX, but it is better insurance against it.
#5
Posted 2022-December-03, 06:01
At IMPs I prefer it for most lead-directing doubles to also suggest sacrificing or taking out their possible game, especially if not vulnerable. Profitable sacrifices and the rare double game swing profits way more than aiming for a killing lead while telling the opponents.
#6
Posted 2022-December-03, 07:33
DavidKok, on 2022-December-03, 06:01, said:
At IMPs I prefer it for most lead-directing doubles to also suggest sacrificing or taking out their possible game, especially if not vulnerable. Profitable sacrifices and the rare double game swing profits way more than aiming for a killing lead while telling the opponents.
I was a bit surprised by your opponent's double of diamonds in the 6 spades auction, which it turns out was based on KJxxx.. at best. What's your take on that situation?
#7
Posted 2022-December-03, 08:59
#8
Posted 2022-December-03, 10:46
DavidKok, on 2022-December-03, 04:59, said:
- Set their contract on the suggested lead.
- Not set it on a different lead.
- Partner needs to not have been planning to lead your suit in the first place.
There are some good stories of auctions such as (1♥)-P-(3♦* 9-11 4(+) hearts)-X; (...pause)3♥ - a.p. where opener was dissuaded from a cold game because of diamond weakness in their hand, but keep in mind this is a rare situation (opponents have already shown a 9-card fit so there is some law protection, also partner is near guaranteed to be on lead). Plus, even on this auction experienced pairs will have agreements about pass and redouble (for me: both are positive, weaker than 4♥ but stronger than 3♥ or a slam try, and pass shows diamond length while redouble shows shortness) so they might gain from your double anyway.
My question about winning on balance was not about lead-direction doubles in general.
It was about doubling with a broken suit.
#9
Posted 2022-December-03, 10:56
I think trying to make hard rules about suit quality is not a great idea. You are already trying to hit a very narrow target, and now you're chipping away at what little remains by banning certain hand types. Arguably it is better to use double for something other than lead-directing instead.
#10
Posted 2022-December-03, 13:55
DavidKok, on 2022-December-03, 10:56, said:
And yet, two experts this week made doubles that seem like madness to me, which contributed to blowing leads.
Apparently, they think it's winning tactics.
#11
Posted 2022-December-03, 16:23
That said, it's not very common that lead-directing doubles lead to good results either. In some situations there may be better uses for the double. For example, I would prefer a double of the 2♥->spades transfer just to show hearts, inviting partner to compete with a fit, but not necessarily wanting a lead (although you will usually want the lead also, at least against a notrump contract). Especially if opps play weak NT.
#13
Posted 2022-December-04, 05:13
bluenikki, on 2022-December-03, 21:16, said:
Is it _really_ rare?
Two black swans in two days?
Whether an action is sound or not on average cannot be determined from two non-randomly chosen examples.
Is it possible the dubious doubles were desperation attempts from a pair behind in a match to claw back imps or MPs. If you are playing opponents who seem to land in the perfect spot as if guided by radar then play the cards as if double dummy, one might feel there is little hope other than to gamble on a low probability action that will reap rewards if successful but won't make things any worse if it fails.
#14
Posted 2022-December-04, 09:15
AL78, on 2022-December-04, 05:13, said:
Is it possible the dubious doubles were desperation attempts from a pair behind in a match to claw back imps or MPs. If you are playing opponents who seem to land in the perfect spot as if guided by radar then play the cards as if double dummy, one might feel there is little hope other than to gamble on a low probability action that will reap rewards if successful but won't make things any worse if it fails.
The perps were in the lead at the time.
That's why I inferred it was part of their normal tactics.