What is the bid here now?
What is the Re-bid here? Bidding
#2
Posted 2017-March-11, 16:10
#3
Posted 2017-March-11, 16:18
#4
Posted 2017-March-11, 17:18
I would presume universal agreement - the thing there might not be agreement on is what to do over 3NT by partner after you bid 3C
#5
Posted 2017-March-11, 18:35
Kaitlyn S, on 2017-March-11, 17:18, said:
Unanimous agreements are of course rare, but pass after 3NT is pretty clear IMO.
#6
Posted 2017-March-11, 19:12
Kaitlyn S, on 2017-March-11, 17:18, said:
I would presume universal agreement - the thing there might not be agreement on is what to do over 3NT by partner after you bid 3C
Actually many options. You can play a 2NT gadget which many play, you can play Gazilli or your 3C bid can even be a totally artificial bid over which 3D asks. To ask "What other option is there?" is a very shortsighted view. An obvious pass after a 3NT bid by the way.
#7
Posted 2017-March-12, 01:53
#8
Posted 2017-March-12, 14:07
#9
Posted 2017-March-12, 14:21
#10
Posted 2017-March-12, 23:04
If he bids 2S, great - raise to 4. If he bids 2NT (four spades, weakness), then you can either raise to 3NT and hope your 2H bid fetches a club lead or else rebid 3C. If partner bids 3C, you can try 5C. And so on.
Cheers,
Mike
#11
Posted 2017-March-13, 00:15
Flem72, on 2017-March-12, 14:21, said:
One will have to change the whole system if one says that 2C is Forcing for for one round.
#12
Posted 2017-March-13, 00:27
#13
Posted 2017-March-13, 08:27
3D - with 18 HCP, you are a little heavy for this. The fact that this bid fails to reveal your excellent 3 card support for partner's major suit is also a huge drawback.
3S - in a way this is a slight underbid, but its huge flaw is that it absolutely positively guarantees 4 card spade support. AKQ tripleton is not good enough, let alone AQx.
2C - very much an underbid, but rarely passed, so a reasonable manufactured gamble. If partner preferences to 2D, you can try 3S next. If partner bids something more descriptively helpful (e.g., 2S or 2NT) you have an easy time of it.
3C - the manufactured bid for those with no stomach for 2C. But this is an absolute 100% game force and you really don't have enough for that either, although you are close.
My guess is that most will choose 3C as the least problematic of the bunch.
(A better solution is to not be playing standard!)
#14
Posted 2017-March-13, 10:31
#15
Posted 2017-March-13, 10:46
july1982xx, on 2017-March-13, 10:31, said:
3D is also non-forcing in all standard methods that I am aware of. You can easily miss a 4S contract when partner holds a minimum response and good 5-card spade suit.
I would bid 3C unless playing with my regular partner (she would never pass a 2C bid).
#16
Posted 2017-March-13, 17:56
If playing updated K/S, then a 2 C bid would be proper. It shows a hand with reversing values, is forcing, and guarantees a rebid.
#17
Posted 2017-March-13, 20:59
Caitlynne, on 2017-March-13, 08:27, said:
3D - with 18 HCP, you are a little heavy for this. The fact that this bid fails to reveal your excellent 3 card support for partner's major suit is also a huge drawback.
3S - in a way this is a slight underbid, but its huge flaw is that it absolutely positively guarantees 4 card spade support. AKQ tripleton is not good enough, let alone AQx.
2C - very much an underbid, but rarely passed, so a reasonable manufactured gamble. If partner preferences to 2D, you can try 3S next. If partner bids something more descriptively helpful (e.g., 2S or 2NT) you have an easy time of it.
3C - the manufactured bid for those with no stomach for 2C. But this is an absolute 100% game force and you really don't have enough for that either, although you are close.
My guess is that most will choose 3C as the least problematic of the bunch.
(A better solution is to not be playing standard!)
I really agree with this analysis. Not playing standard may not be a solution in itself,though. Playing Precision, this hand is an easy 1♣ opener.. But change ♣A to ♣2 and we Precisionistas have the death hand problem--just too good for a single raise (given the crap we open on), don't want to jump raise spades without four (and hides the diamonds worse than in standard), while 3♦ has the same risk of missing the possible 5-3 spade fit.The advantage is that using a 2NT gadget is less costly than in standard (how often do we want to rebid a natural 2NT?)--but the partnership must still discuss and practice the sequences.
#19
Posted 2017-March-14, 04:29