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Daily Bridge in New Zealand

Shape!

Never mind the high-card point count. Take a look at one’s shape. Well, best look at both! How good then is the following 8-count after one’s partner opens 1S? I thought today we would take a look at how our Panel approach the following hand which technically is not strong enough to force to game but has plenty of potential.

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Pairs. E/W Vul.

 

Q J 10 8

7

A J 10 9 6 2

8 4

 

West

North

East

South

 

 

 

1 ♠

Pass

?

 

 

This is perhaps the conventional approach.

Peter Newell “2Diamond-small: and followed by 4Spade-small. The value of these hands often will revolve around partner’s fit for my 6 card suit, and while I only have  8 points, the intermediates (9,10s) and shape make this a much stronger hand. When I rebid 4Spade-small, I'm showing a delayed game raise with good diamonds.  It is usually a poor choice to splinter in these types of hands with a small doubleton in 1 suit and a good 6- carder in the other.”

However, there is strong emphasis on the singleton:

Bruce Anderson “4Heart-small, splinter perhaps marginal in high cards but the quality of the trumps and the side suit justifies this bid in my view. If partner has nothing more that Spade-smallAKxxxx  Heart-smallxxx Diamond-smallx Club-smallKxx game is still odds on. And if partner is strong, slam may well be possible. I would not have bid  2Diamond-small as doing so makes it too easy for East to compete, perhaps with a heart suit or hearts and clubs. So, I am abstaining from the problem of try to work out what 3Heart-small over 2Diamond-small means, and then finding a response.

We asked the Panel a subsequent question about what to bid had we chosen 2Diamond-small and then heard a natural 3Heart-small from partner. More of that shortly.

The idea of bidding to game to keep the opponents quiet has its supporters.

Anthony Ker “4Spade-small: At last an easy one. ???? Playing Precision my partner opening shows 11-15 and 5 spades. So we will simply jump straight to 4Spade-small - slam is unlikely (though not impossible e.g. Spade-smallAKxxx Heart-smallxx Diamond-smallx Club-smallAKxxx) and I'm not staying out of game. There is a danger of competition in hearts and clubs so pre-emptive action may be necessary.

Stephen Blackstock “4Spade-small: Several options here, none of which can give an ideal description. The hand is clearly worth a raise to game, either directly or subsequently, so I reject any sequence that does not reach 4Spade-small or higher. The options are 2Diamond-small, 2NT (constructive spade raise), 4Heart-small (splinter) and 4Spade-small. The first three all suggest more high cards than I have, so may induce South to drive too high. 4Heart-smallis the only option that is clearly wrong: insufficient values and lacking the high card in clubs that South has a right to expect. It will also help EW with the opening lead. The problem with 4Spade-small is that the hand is more slam suitable than the bid suggests -but as Spade-smallQJ108 Heart-small7 Diamond-smallAJ1092 Club-small843 would likely get a majority vote for 4Spade-small, can the hand we hold be so far off? 

 

The reason to prefer the mild 4Spade-small underbid to the mild overbids of 2Diamond-small/2NT is that we may keep the opponents quiet. Entering at the five level, vulnerable, often won't be attractive even though it could be their hand and not ours.”

That is certainly possible though one opponent has so far said nothing.

There are now other ways to splinter than by jumping to the 4-level.

 

Wayne Burrows “3Heart-small: invitational with four spades and singleton heart.”

Michael Ware “3NT: 10-12 GF splinter somewhere (4Club-small asks where). I think a lot of people are playing similar methods these days (Malcolm Mayer bids 3Heart-small to show same thing).”

and then initially showing spade support are:

Andy Braithwaite “3Diamond-small: 10-11 with 4 spades and follow up with a 4Heart-small splinter over a 3Spade-small response.”

Nigel Kearney “2NT, 4-card spade support. In the past I would have bid 2Diamond-small on this hand type, but my experience is that too often it just doesn't work well. Either opponents or partner may bid something that prevents you completing the picture as you planned. Four card support is so important that I want that to be the message I communicate unambiguously right from the start. Especially with the diamond suit I have here, where even a singleton with partner may play well by establishing diamonds with a dummy reversal. If I had a suit like Diamond-smallAQxxx or Diamond-smallKQxxx where a fitting honour from partner would make a huge difference to the hand's trick taking potential, then the delayed game raise would have more upside. I am definitely not going to stop short of game with this hand.”

All are therefore going to game, some quicker than others, some emphasising their singleton and others concerned at keeping their opponents silent. We see as well some different approaches to showing a side-suit singleton.

As above, we asked how the Panel would bid had they bid a traditional 2Diamond-small and heard a natural strong 3Heart-small bid from their partner. That created criticism in some quarters:

Wayne Burrows “ After 1Spade-small 2Diamond-small most would play 3Heart-small as a splinter agreeing diamonds.

Andy Braithwaite “ If partner bids 3Heart-small over 2Diamond-small that would be a splinter so I have lost the plot on this problem- but if it was natural 55, I would bid 4Spade-small as my diamonds are no good now.”

Stephen Blackstock “ What would I bid over 3Heart-small from South? Depends what that means - with 2Heart-small forcing, 3Heart-small should be a splinter but that is hard to believe here. I suppose 3Spade-small and see what happens is safe enough, but what I really expect to see is South bidding too much.”

While a forcing 2Heart-small and 3Heart-small as a splinter is a good approach, I am not sure that is by any means normal in this country yet.

Wayne Burrows “ After 1Spade-small 2Diamond-small 3Heart-small if that is forced on me then I bid 3Spade-small. Partner has game forced and I have no reason to not agree spades and to preserve room for slam exploration.

I think 1Spade-small 2Diamond-small 3Heart-small is more normal as a splinter though. The general rule is if a bid would be natural and forcing as 1Spade-small 2Diamond-small 2Heart-small would be here then one level higher is typically a splinter.”

The question is having bid 2Diamond-small initially and hearing a natural strong 3Heart-small, is your hand strong enough to suggest slam? Peter Newell has already indicated he would bid 4Spade-small. So would…

Nigel Kearney “4Spade-small to emphasise my good trumps. It is not a great description but is the best I can do at this point. 3Spade-small would be too ambiguous as to both strength and shape and might not necessarily promise three spades, let alone four. For my 4Spade-small bid, partner will be expecting something more like Spade-smallKQx Heart-smallxx Diamond-smallAKxxx Club-smallxxx but I hope my extra shape and trumps will be compensation for the lack of high cards.”

Would 3Spade-small be stronger than 4Spade-small after the natural 3Heart-small? Michael Ware thinks so:

Michael Ware “3Spade-small: Over 2Diamond-small then over natural 3Heart-small (most people play 3Heart-small as a splinter agreeing diamonds these days?) I bid 3Spade-small intending to co-operate fully in slam (and grand) investigation. Although my singleton heart isn't great opposite the natural heart suit, I still have a very good source of tricks, and the very valuable 4th trump opposite a partner who has just shown extras.”

The problem is what would you bid without a club hold and with say only a doubleton spade? Perhaps, that problem is one reason why it is a good idea to play a forcing 2Heart-small.

The real issue here was not getting to game (all the Panel did) but in reaching slam.

South Deals
E-W Vul

Q J 10 8

7

A J 10 9 6 2

8 4

7 5 2

J 8 6

K 7

K 7 6 5 2

 

N

W

 

E

S

 

K Q 9 3 2

Q 8 4 3

J 10 9 3

 

A K 9 6 4 3

A 10 5 4

5

A Q

I am sure South would take action over the delayed game raise 4Spade-small response and over a heart splinter. I am less confident if North had simply raised to game after South’s opening bid. Not vulnerable, North could be extremely weak.

Stephen Blackstock expressed the worry that South might go too high if North made a game-force splinter. On this occasion, that would not be a worry as there would be an 11 out of 10 bonus if one can bid and make all 13 tricks. West may well lead a trump after the splinter. South needs 3 discards on the diamonds and after a low ruff brings down the Diamond-smallK, they would be a little worried (in grand slam) that West was not false-carding with Diamond-smallQ as declarer discards on the third round of diamonds. Fortune this time favours the brave though there might be the usual worry of failing in grand only to see the opposition wallow at the game level.

An interesting array of methods suggested by our Panel. Thanks to all.

Richard Solomon

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