What does this double show?
#1
Posted 2006-May-26, 07:17
(2♣*)-P-(2♦*)-2♥
(3♣)-4♥-(5♣)-X
2♣ was precision, 2♦ the usual ask, then partner overcalled 2♥ and finally makes a double of 5♣. What kind of hands does this show? Doesn't matter because it's pure penalty?
(To those who recognize the hand -- I don't think the actual hands matter much since my decision was wrong regardless of what the double showed, and that's not why I am asking this question here.)
Arend
#2
Posted 2006-May-26, 07:29
#3
Posted 2006-May-26, 08:02
game was bid unforced (4♥ over 3♣) and
the 5-level belongs to opps.
So dbl is (almost) pure penalty, and pass would have been forcing.
The only reason I could think of to change my mind, would be a preemptive rise to 4♥, but you did not mention that.
#4
Posted 2006-May-26, 08:09
#5
Posted 2006-May-26, 08:30
#6
Posted 2006-May-26, 08:37
Not a 'trump stack' penalty, but a penalty double nonetheless.
North is limited: no 4♣ cue on the way to 4♥, so 4♥ is almost always bid primarily on shape in these auctions. I would not take 4♥ as establishing a forcing pass: North bids 4♣ over 3♣ to establish a force.
North can pull a penalty double on a freak...... but he had better be right.... say 2=5=6=0, as an obvious example.
#7
Posted 2006-May-26, 11:55
- hrothgar
#8
Posted 2006-May-26, 15:14
#9
Posted 2006-May-26, 16:04
jchiu, on May 26 2006, 04:14 PM, said:
It does not apply here: unless, in your partnership, 4♥ created a forcing situation. In other words, the inversion does not, in itself, alter when a force has been established: it merely changes (inverts) the action that one takes when one has decided not to bid. Thus, pass suggests a hand with which more old-fashioned players would double while double suggests a hand with which more old-fashioned players would make a forcing pass.
The inversion has nothing to do with basic method: while I do not use the inversion (more from laziness than anything), two good friends of mine do in their partnership, and they use a 2/1 method.
#10
Posted 2006-May-26, 17:00
As Mike says, the pass-double inversion only applies in FP situations. My understanding is that you pass when you would have doubled and double when you would have passed, except that you still show a slam-try by passing and then pulling partner's double.
The advantage of the inversion is that partner is more likely to double when you make a penalty pass than when you make a non-penalty pass. This makes it more likely that you can show a slam-try, by passing and then pulling partner's double.
I've never actually played it, so hopefully someone will correct me if I've got anything wrong...
#11
Posted 2006-May-27, 02:32
#12
Posted 2006-May-28, 14:58
the dbl is penalty, ... pass would not
have been forcing, only the 4H bidder
knows, why he bid 4H.
The 4H bidder can remove the dbl, but this
would be rare.
5 card support, void in clubs and a strong
side suit (=> most likely 5-5-3 pattern),
i.e a hand, which has a chance to produce
enough tricks, that 5H has a chance.
This will most often happen red vs. green,
because in this case, you may convert +100
into -100 /-200, but you may get 600.
With kind regards
Marlowe
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#13
Posted 2006-May-28, 15:32
Of course pass would not be forcing - the auction suggests that the board belongs to the opps allthough this may not be so. It is possible that opps are in a forcing-pass situation, but we can't be.
#14
Posted 2006-May-29, 01:21
The non-forcing nature of the pass is very clear on this auction, when partner could have bid 4C to establish a forcing pass and chose not to.
The 4H bidder can pull the double, but only on an exceptional hand. I don't think a club void by itself would count as exceptional: the opponents are likely to have a very large club fit here.

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