Blame assignment for a poor slam
#1
Posted 2007-March-12, 04:31
♥x
♦QJxx
♣KQJ
♠A
♥K10xx
♦AKxx
♣Axxx
S -N
1♦-1♠
2♥-3♦ (game forcing, (7)8+)
3NT-4♦
6♦
#3
Posted 2007-March-12, 05:35
Anyway, seems like I don't have enough entries to combine ruffing hearts with setting up spades, so I'll have to pick one of the options. My feeling is LHO has the heart ace, so I'll try and setup the spades: ♦A, ♠A, ♦up, ♠ruff, ♣up and guess whether to run ♠J or ruff another spade.
#4
Posted 2007-March-12, 06:44
About the play, I would take the diamond in dummy and play a heart to the K. If the A is onside, great. If not, there is still a small chance in spades.
#5
Posted 2007-March-12, 07:25
#6
Posted 2007-March-12, 08:21
I dont blame S for opening 1♦, reversing 2♥ nor bidding 3NT. I am not sure about norths 3♦. It is reasonable to support diamonds, but 3nt is a choice too. I think 4♦ is a huge overbid. North has a rotten hand without controls. The jump to 6♦ is unnecessary, when partner is unlimited. South probably paniced, when he saw that his partner is control poor, but still bids strongly. My conclusion is that south did a small mistake and north a huge mistake.
#7
Posted 2007-March-12, 08:31
Peter
#8
Posted 2007-March-12, 08:45
I'm starting to see more and more rebid 3♦ on North's and I like it. Why should 2♠ be automatic, just because we own 5? 3N is also normal and limits South's hand.
I also like 4♦. The KQJ are now working cards, the stiff heart is nice and there's just a little duplication in spades. Opposite a more typical: x, AKxx, AKxxx, Axx, slam is a great spot, and South would bid it the same up to 3N.
I don't like 6♦ at all, but I'm not sure I like ANY call over 4♦. 4N looks wrong, and to cue bid the A♠ is just encouraging. Maybe just a quiet 5♦ is called for.
I like:
1♦ - 1♠
2N - 3♦ (checkback)
3♥ - 3N
#9
Posted 2007-March-12, 08:47
The ♠A is as valuable, if N insists on ♠s, as xx, which 2N could easily contain.
Note that N will not make more than 1 try over 2N (if any), and the bad slam would be easily avoided. However, the bad slam should be avoided anyway: S has a decent hand, but he has short trump... so I do not understand 6♦.
I think S made two blunders, while N was right to make a try: opposite x AKxx AKxxx Axx slam is pretty good.
#10
Posted 2007-March-12, 21:27
pbleighton, on Mar 12 2007, 09:31 AM, said:
Peter
ditto.
North had no reason to not believe pd's 3NT. After all, he bid 2H there are wastage on majors.
#11
Posted 2007-March-12, 21:40
#12
Posted 2007-March-12, 22:19
#13
Posted 2007-March-13, 08:16
There are some opening systems which reserve bids for these hand types, but without them you are often in the wrong contract.
I surely like any bid till 3 Diamond. Okay, 2 NT instead of 2 Heart is a valid option and surely had worked much better here. But with say, K, ATxx, AKxx,Axxx I surely had bid 2 Heart, not 2 NT.
I do not understand the 3 NT bid. If this shows a 1444 or something like that, North must pass. If it is just "meaningless" like: I have clubs stopped and if you have 7 or 8 with just 3 card support, we belong into 3 NT, then I do understand the 4 ♦ bid. Opposite the example above the slam is a little less then Diamonds 3-2.
I dislike the jump to 6 Diamond but after some cuebidding I may had reached the same slam.
Roland
Sanity Check: Failure (Fluffy)
More system is not the answer...
#14
Posted 2007-March-14, 12:36
About the hand you can all blame me, because I had forgotten north had passed initially.
To the play:
I tried to ruff ♥s in dummy, when I played singleton from dummy at trick 2, RHO played low. It took me a couple of minuntes to decide what to do, but in the end ♥10 forced the ace and when a trump came back I could ruff 2 ♥ in dummy.
Problem is I got shortened on trumps on the way back to do it, so the line also required either clubs 3-3 or a squeeze in the black suits. So against best defence (wich didn't happen) it requires ♥A onside or short, ♦3-2 and ♣3-3 or a squeeze, around 65%+70%+55% I think
Later I though that then the best line is stablising dummy, win ♦A, ♠A, ♣K, ♠ruff, ♣Q, ♠ruff, ♣J, ♠ruff and ♣A discarding a ♥ from dummy.
It 'only' requires ♠4-3 and ♣3-3, but copes to ♦4-1, even if ♠K is third you might do it easier.