Posted 2021-April-05, 17:27
3N over 3S showed a lack of understanding about the auction, but in reality was going to work out well (if bad bidding never gained, we’d all give up the game...it would be too tough), but North, who showed an even greater lack of understanding with 3S then made matters much worse with an egregious 4S bid.
North needs to learn to pay attention to what partner is saying.
Over 3C, partner is at least 5-5, and definitely does not have 3 spades. If south is 2=5=1=5, then 3N may turn out badly, but we do have two working cards in partner’s suits and the opps may have trouble establishing diamonds
More importantly, with our KJx in diamonds, expecting partner to usually hold 2 of them, can we really expect partner to bid 3N on Qx or worse? Yes, I see that partner did exactly that....but 3N was a terrible bid. Of course, North had, it seems, no intention of actually listening to what south’s bidding was saying...
So North should heed S J Simon’s advice: don’t worry about getting to the best possible contract....try, instead, to get to the best contract possible. Please, no posts arguing that these two statements mean the same thing. Good bridge players have understood the difference for 70 years.
3N may not be the single dummy contract of our dreams opposite say Jx AJxxx x AJxxx but partner will usually hold better suits than that, and even opposite that, 3N is not down yet.
Bidding 3S was bad. Bidding 4S was far, far worse. She deserves dummy to have Void KJxxx Axx Axxxx
Btw, and this is surely too esoteric for North, but there is nothing wrong with bidding 3D over 3C. This should NOT be understood as an attempt to play in diamonds but as a probe in an effort to find the right contract. South should bid 3S with 2=5=1=5, 3N with a diamond stopper and 3H with the actual hand, over which North bids 3N, secure in the knowledge that she’s not missing a 6-2 spade fit.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari