cards number signal or welcome signal? Which signal should be used in which condition?
#1
Posted 2013-September-29, 04:51
Today I played with my good friends. We've played together for 20 years, but we all are not professional even not good ones. We just love playing bridge.
In one of today's hands, my partner and I were defending a 3S. I got Q72 in my hearts. The dummy's heart was Jxxx. My partner played HA.
My question is that, at this condition, should I use card number signal (3 cards, play 2 first), or use welcome signal (play 7 first)?
At that hand, I played H2. Then my partner played HK and I followed H7. So he didn't play the third heart but switched to club. Finally the dealer discarded his last heart and made the 3S.
We discussed this hand. I think that the problem was that I wasn't sure if I should welcome heart at the first time. If I can be sure that HAK was at my partner's hand, I should welcome him with H7-H2. What do you think? Does it have a general rule to identify when to use welcome signal and when to use card number signal?
#2
Posted 2013-September-29, 05:16
#3
Posted 2013-September-29, 06:41
Endymion77, on 2013-September-29, 05:16, said:
But what if he got Ax only? He may lead A and then a small heart to mean doubleton and want to ruff.
#4
Posted 2013-September-29, 06:45
#5
Posted 2013-September-29, 07:41
#7
Posted 2013-September-30, 06:56
akwoo, on 2013-September-29, 11:12, said:
If you do this you will want to signal attitude on King leads.
In very general terms, it is popular to play attitude on partner's leads and count on declarer's.
#8
Posted 2013-September-30, 07:54
The standard signal on first trick is attitude, which means play high (♥7) if you'd like the suit to be continued.
So your partner was right.
#9
Posted 2013-September-30, 08:41
As has also been written, some pairs have special rules for Ace and King leads on the opening trick. Many in my homeland play an Ace lead as asking for an attitude signal and a King lead asking for a count signal. To call that Standard though is wrong. Leads vary greatly between regions and attitude on both Ace and King leads is also common. Even when playing attitude/count, it is not necessarily clear; while the more common approach is as above, I personally prefer Ace = count, King = attitude quite strongly when not playing Rusinow (second highest) leads. That is because the King lead can come from both AKxxx and KQx and attitude is much more useful on the latter holding.
There are other issues with these methods too and my advice is to completely forget about them until you have a partner who is interested in trying it out. In the meantime, just agree the basic: attitude->count->suit preference. That way you will nearly always know where you stand. You can always add some exceptions later on if you find special situations where you needed a different approach. I mentioned one such possibility already - partner leads an Ace and Dummy holds a singleton and enough trumps in the suit. One possible agreement is to skip directly to suit preference here. Perhaps you will find other "special" hands too but the basic method is actually good on the vast majority and certainly adequate for practically all players below expert level (imho).
#10
Posted 2013-September-30, 09:53
fweng322, on 2013-September-29, 06:41, said:
If that's what he did, then he's already blown up the suit, so your signal doesn't really matter all that much. He might as well continue, and maybe you can get in before declarer draws trumps and give him his ruff. It's only a mistake if there's some other switch that you really need him to make before letting declarer in.
And suppose you DO have the Kxx, so you could give him a ruff? If you give a count signal, he won't know what you want him to do.
You can't cater your signalling to both situations, you have to pick one method. As others have said, A is usually from AKx (unless you have an agreement to always lead K from this holding), so you should signal on that assumption.
#11
Posted 2013-September-30, 17:47
I know what "attitude" and "count" signal means, but I've never been really clear when to use which. Your replies make me clear a lot.
Does the "suit" signal mean which suit you want your partner to switch? Small number means lower suit (exclude the suit you discard), right?
#12
Posted 2013-September-30, 18:33
fweng322, on 2013-September-30, 17:47, said:
Yes. You can use suit preference when following suit, too, not just when discarding. A very common use of a suit preference signal is when leading a card for partner to ruff.
#13
Posted 2013-October-01, 13:57
She's very easy to declare against if you know this (but wins anyway) and you have some excellent advice above on how and when to mix it up. I learned on the theory that partner signaled what I needed to know and we had a gentle partnership discussion when it didn't happen and improved as we went along.
Today I play Ace for attitude King for count with the exceptions to give suit preference as above. Slowly the oddball situations come to mind such as when partner owned a 1♥ opener showing 5 and I raised showing 3. The K♥ opening lead asks for count but dummy hits with 4 of them. Hmm declarer only has one so I'll give suit preference.
Takes practice and a highly recommended partnership discussion over the ones that get away.
What is baby oil made of?
#14
Posted 2013-October-02, 11:55
That said, there are a few conventions like the Smith echo some (but nowhere nearly all) expert players use. Also, most play that the opening lead of an ace against a no trump contract demands you play an honor if you have one, otherwise show count.
Lots of seemingly ingenious signals have been devised over the years (e.g. odd/even discards), but most have been abandoned except for very specialized situations. It's mostly regular or UDCA these days.