This board was played yesterday, at our local tournment, in Pula, Croatia. When asked about the meaning of partner jump cuebid, West said it was not defined in their system. Nevertheless, he took considerable time before passing. Perhaps I should add that South raised to 4♥ quite hastily, and that it was North who did the asking (before West's pass). East tought there was no logical alternative to bidding 5♣, especially at IMPs, so he bid. North, on the other side, thought that East was helped by partner's excessive thinking in his decision. South led a heart, so East made his contract, and North, thinking their side has been damaged, called the director. However, we are a small club, and don't have a director. One of the partecipants has been choosen to take a decision when such situations arise, but he would much appreciate some advice from this forum. Thank you.
yet another hesitation
#1
Posted 2016-January-20, 16:55
This board was played yesterday, at our local tournment, in Pula, Croatia. When asked about the meaning of partner jump cuebid, West said it was not defined in their system. Nevertheless, he took considerable time before passing. Perhaps I should add that South raised to 4♥ quite hastily, and that it was North who did the asking (before West's pass). East tought there was no logical alternative to bidding 5♣, especially at IMPs, so he bid. North, on the other side, thought that East was helped by partner's excessive thinking in his decision. South led a heart, so East made his contract, and North, thinking their side has been damaged, called the director. However, we are a small club, and don't have a director. One of the partecipants has been choosen to take a decision when such situations arise, but he would much appreciate some advice from this forum. Thank you.
#2
Posted 2016-January-20, 19:20
North asked about East's bid before West's pass? Why did he do that? It's not his turn. Did he ask before his partner bid 4♥ or after?
What lead could South have made that would defeat the contract? That's just curiosity, it wouldn't affect the ruling. At first glance, anyway, 5♣ appears to be cold.
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#3
Posted 2016-January-20, 19:45
blackshoe, on 2016-January-20, 19:20, said:
Glance again.
#4
Posted 2016-January-21, 03:15
avoscill, on 2016-January-20, 16:55, said:
FWIW, I would probably raise to 5♣ too, one off when S leads a trump.
#5
Posted 2016-January-21, 05:32
sanst, on 2016-January-21, 03:15, said:
With the wrinkle that if declarer wins in hand and plays a diamond, you have to switch to a heart not play a second trump when you win the A.
Would I bid 5♣ - probably
Do I think P is a logical alternative - yes, give partner xxx, Q10x, Kxxxxx, x and now 5♣ is hopeless and so is 4♥.
I don't know if you can weight, but some of 4♥-1 and some of 4♥-2 would seem appropriate.
#6
Posted 2016-January-21, 10:49
#7
Posted 2016-January-21, 11:35
1. Was there UI? Arguably twice - when west answered no agreement (that's the arguable part. If they had an agreement and West forgot then there's UI as well as MI. Otherwise maybe not) and when west tanked over 4H (again debatable if South insta-4Hd and the hitch wasn't too long)
2. What does the UI suggest. If a misunderstanding then it means West isn't on board and getting the nature of Easts hand across. So 5C is suggested.
3. I'd poll given the conditions. A respondent might say, "didn't I already express my hand with 3H"? This is what I'd say - give partner soft cards and short clubs and we are beating 4H and 5C.
If East truly thought they had an agreement (and why not?) they should disclose the meaning about 3H.
So I'm not sure.
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#8
Posted 2016-January-21, 13:35
Phil, on 2016-January-21, 11:35, said:
1. Was there UI? Arguably twice - when west answered no agreement (that's the arguable part. If they had an agreement and West forgot then there's UI as well as MI. Otherwise maybe not) and when west tanked over 4H (again debatable if South insta-4Hd and the hitch wasn't too long)
2. What does the UI suggest. If a misunderstanding then it means West isn't on board and getting the nature of Easts hand across. So 5C is suggested.
3. I'd poll given the conditions. A respondent might say, "didn't I already express my hand with 3H"? This is what I'd say - give partner soft cards and short clubs and we are beating 4H and 5C.
If East truly thought they had an agreement (and why not?) they should disclose the meaning about 3H.
So I'm not sure.
I (East) truly thought we had an agreement. Since we have never had the occasion to use it, I wasn't sure my partner will remember it, but I regard my intended meaning of the jump cuebid so logical that I hoped he will get it right. After all, it was just a matter of bidding 3NT with a heart stopper. I've never seen another use for this bid. True, most people require that all the remaining suits be stopped, but at the table I was somewhat disposed towards gambling. And yes, I did try, as declarer, to explain them what my bid shows, but again South was very swift in putting his lead on the table, and again North prevented any explanation on my part.
I am well aware that knowing that pard didn't understand my bid was UI. But does it matters here? My hand was anyway very close to a 5♣ opener (one club card less, one ace more). To me, bidding 5♣ on this auction is automatic.
#9
Posted 2016-January-21, 15:32
The only way to truly know at the time of the session is for a director to poll your peers.
If you are looking for something objective I'd post the hand on Bridgewinners. Don't mention the UI and don't mention your partners lack of understanding. Just say you hold this, and you bid 3H which means this. Then you'll have a better idea of the accuracy of the ruling.
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#10
Posted 2016-January-21, 16:25
avoscill, on 2016-January-21, 13:35, said:
I am well aware that knowing that pard didn't understand my bid was UI. But does it matters here? My hand was anyway very close to a 5♣ opener (one club card less, one ace more). To me, bidding 5♣ on this auction is automatic.
I think you're a club short, partner can have quite a good useless hand Jxx, KQx, QJxxx, xx where 3♥ has no play if clubs are 2-2 and 5♣ is dialling 800, but he can't double because you could easily have 8 clubs and a spade card.
It does matter in that the UI means he could have a suitable hand for you that he would have already bid on had he understood the bid (like the same shape but ♥xxx and ♦AKxxxx).
#11
Posted 2016-January-22, 10:07
#12
Posted 2016-January-22, 12:14
Phil, on 2016-January-21, 15:32, said:
The only way to truly know at the time of the session is for a director to poll your peers.
If you are looking for something objective I'd post the hand on Bridgewinners. Don't mention the UI and don't mention your partners lack of understanding. Just say you hold this, and you bid 3H which means this. Then you'll have a better idea of the accuracy of the ruling.
Thank you for your offer Phil.
It is not so much for the result, but, upon listening at some opinions in our club and in this forum, I really got interested in what bid the majority of players would choose at this point in the auction. If you post this problem, please specify that the scoring was IMPs. Since EW are vulnerable, East should bid games with probabilities of success much less then 50%. In addition, there is the question of NS heart game, and they too are vulnerable. It seams to me that the mathematics here is pretty clear.
#13
Posted 2016-January-22, 16:06
Oddly enough, with the UI that partner doesn't know what 3♥ means, the UI from the pause says "partner doesn't know what 3♥ means". It doesn't show or deny anything - it's not a "I'd like to <something>, but I don't know if it's right", it's a "what could that possibly mean?" So I don't think the pause is an issue.
I would want to know, since East "knew" he had an agreement, what the agreement says about calls once 3NT is out of the picture. If they "have" a call that says "I have a stopper, is 4NT fine?" or "please bid your suit" (or P/C), then there may be a different set of LAs than if their agreement is "ya know, I don't think we've ever thought of that..."
#14
Posted 2016-January-23, 05:44
mycroft, on 2016-January-22, 16:06, said:
The pause is very much an issue, since the assumption is that partner knows your agreement and is thinking about what to do. You are constrained in exactly the same way as if partner had not said he didn't know your agreement.
But then you are also constrained by the comment, which makes the situation very tricky.
#15
Posted 2016-January-24, 03:52
Your opponents made by themselves a problem here by asking your partner what 3H means, because it's pretty obvious that here is a case of logical bid, not agreement bid. If they would have not ask, then here will be no problem.
Your partner hesitation is quite normal, I would say quite expected after your 3H, and opponent 4H immediately after, he is in strange situation after totally normal opening 1H.
#16
Posted 2016-January-24, 07:16
Not sure why you think that West's hesitation is "normal" or "expected", but these are not the criteria used to determine the constraints on East. The criteria are: what the hesitation suggests (with the assumption that West answered the question correctly) and what logical alternatives to 5♣ exists. You feel there are none, so that is fine, but it doesn't mean you discount the other considerations.
While it's true that North made the case more complicated by asking out to turn, the effect on East would be the same if he had asked at the proper time. If he hadn't asked at all there would have been UI from the hesitation but not from the answer, which is simpler, but that is not the opponents' fault. They have the right to ask.
#17
Posted 2016-January-24, 15:39
Vampyr, on 2016-January-24, 07:16, said:
If it's something most players will assume, he doesn't need to disclose it. 40B6a:
Quote
frequently denoted GBK.
#18
Posted 2016-January-24, 16:19
But I really think E has no logical alternatives, he can not pass 4H after his 3H bid, it should be game forsing.
If S passes 3H, and let's say W shows no stopper H with 3S... will now E bid 4C, or 5C? I think that's the question that should be investigated by the poll, and according to the poll made the decision. I would bid 5C, that's why I would leave the 5C made by E, regardless of his partner hesitation and bad explanation.
#19
Posted 2016-January-24, 16:40
barmar, on 2016-January-24, 15:39, said:
No, that's not right. East has assumed that he and his partner had an implicit agreement about the bid. If West assumes the same then he must disclose it.
Quote
frequently denoted GBK.
Players' agreements are not GBK. Even if a particular convention is well-known and fairly common.
And in any case, there is at least one player to whom it is not known, so "general" is certainly an exaggeration.
#20
Posted 2016-January-25, 09:32
Vampyr, on 2016-January-24, 16:40, said:
Did he assume they had an implicit agreement? Or did he make the bid because he thought "everyone knows what this bid means" or "anyone with any competence should be able to figure out what it must mean"?
There is a problem with the concept of GBK -- there are lots of things that are well known to most advanced players (many cue bids, splinters), but not life novices (and certainly not real novices). Where's the line?