Using a double to show a suit and a weak hand Followups
#1
Posted 2011-August-31, 08:14
(P)-1♦-(1♥)-??
I had a (let's pretend decent) 6 card club suit but not a good enough hand to bid 2♣ (we're *not* playing negative free bids). So I doubled, planning on following up by bidding clubs.
The auction continued:
(P)-1♦-(1♥)-X
(1♠)-X*-(2♥)-??
*My partner's double showed a spade suit.
Now, do I have to continue with 3♣ to define my hand, or am I allowed to pass and leave everyone (including partner) in the dark? I chose to pass and it continued:
(P)-1♦-(1♥)-X
(1♠)-X*-(2♥)-P
(P)-2♠-(P)-3♣
At this point have I shown what my hand is? Does 3♣ mean something else after having passed? Would 3♣ have meant something else instead of passing over 2♥? How do these followups work?
Never tell the same lie twice. - Elim Garek on the real moral of "The boy who cried wolf"
#2
Posted 2011-August-31, 08:17
Having said that, your partner should know what's going on after you passed 2H (which was best) and then bid 3C.
- hrothgar
#3
Posted 2011-August-31, 08:27
han, on 2011-August-31, 08:17, said:
Having said that, your partner should know what's going on after you passed 2H (which was best) and then bid 3C.
I thought that when not playing negative free bids, a double and then bid of a new suit shows a hand that would have made a negative free bid. Is that completely incorrect? Am I confusing this with some other situation?
Never tell the same lie twice. - Elim Garek on the real moral of "The boy who cried wolf"
#4
Posted 2011-August-31, 09:03
- pass
- 1NT (if you have a heart stopper)
- 2♦ (if you have 3+ diamonds)
- 3♣ (if you have seven, or a good six-card suit)
You may be confusing it with:
1♦-(2♣)-x-pass
2♥-(pass)-2♠
which shows a weak hand with long spades and does not promise heart or diamond tollerance.
#5
Posted 2011-August-31, 09:31
First you X showing ♠, then you pull! seemingly denying ♠. Makes no sense to me.
Try passing at your first turn and introduce ♣ if the auction permits.
#6
Posted 2011-August-31, 09:34
- hrothgar
#7
Posted 2011-August-31, 11:08
I don't see anything wrong with bidding the way Bunny bid in the original post with a hand holding 6 clubs and less than the values to bid them directly over 1♥.
#8
Posted 2011-August-31, 11:17
I have played negative free bids and while they are useful on a hand like this, I do not like the idea of having to double with a hand an ace stronger.
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#9
Posted 2011-August-31, 12:39
ArtK78, on 2011-August-31, 11:08, said:
Are you blind or what? If the opponents raise to 4H and partner has a good hand with a 4-1-6-2 shape, should he bid 4S or not? How can you say with a straight face that you don't see anything wrong?
- hrothgar
#10
Posted 2011-August-31, 12:48
han, on 2011-August-31, 12:39, said:
Partner bidding 4♠ in competition is the risk that you take if you double on a hand without spades. If that happens, you have to decide whether to run to your 6 card club suit.
Nothing is perfect. Pass is not a perfect solution, either.
#11
Posted 2011-August-31, 13:17
BunnyGo, on 2011-August-31, 08:27, said:
Yes, you are confusing it with the situation where you are playing negative free bids, and then have to double on a single-suited hand which is to strong to make the NFB.
If you are not playing NFBs, you just have to pass some hands you would have liked to make a NFB on. Too bad. Maybe you can show it later.
-- Bertrand Russell
#13
Posted 2011-August-31, 16:19
Never tell the same lie twice. - Elim Garek on the real moral of "The boy who cried wolf"
#14
Posted 2011-September-01, 02:31
Never tell the same lie twice. - Elim Garek on the real moral of "The boy who cried wolf"