How would you interpret this?
#1
Posted 2008-October-19, 14:46
3♦(no 5-card but at least one 4-card)-5NT(?)
I bid 5NT, which ended up with a specific reaction that may have been the right end decision but resulted in a poor score. The other three at the table had no idea what 5NT meant.
FWIW, the scoring was teams. I had the option of bidding 4♣ or 4♦ instead, either of which would be natural but typically unbalanced (5431, for example). I also had the option in a different sequence of showing specifically 3244/2344 and slammish (describing which doubleton major and which 3-card major).
-P.J. Painter.
#2
Posted 2008-October-19, 15:41
or
quantitative to 7NT.
of course the two hands are not exactly the same but as opener I'd have bid my better minor as a safety play.
George Carlin
#3
Posted 2008-October-19, 15:59
#4
Posted 2008-October-19, 16:15
#5
Posted 2008-October-19, 16:24
I don't know what you had, but a (32)44 goes through 4♠. Over 4N (slam rejection) you can bid your 3 card fragment is you are trying to back into a 5-3 or good 4-3.
If pard is a max and accepting, he can bid a 5 card major himself.
#6
Posted 2008-October-19, 18:49
kenrexford, on Oct 19 2008, 03:46 PM, said:
3♦(no 5-card but at least one 4-card)-5NT(?)
I bid 5NT, which ended up with a specific reaction that may have been the right end decision but resulted in a poor score. The other three at the table had no idea what 5NT meant.
FWIW, the scoring was teams. I had the option of bidding 4♣ or 4♦ instead, either of which would be natural but typically unbalanced (5431, for example). I also had the option in a different sequence of showing specifically 3244/2344 and slammish (describing which doubleton major and which 3-card major).
Just a note that if 3C was Puppet, 3D showed one or both, then 4C and 4D are not natural; they are artificial bids, showing both majors, one a slam invite the other with no slam interest and asking opener to pick the suit. At least this is the way I have played Puppet for "decades". Of course other methods are possible, but perhaps those methods should have another name because IMO it is not Puppet any more.
#7
Posted 2008-October-19, 19:26
- hrothgar
#8
Posted 2008-October-20, 06:37
1. 4minor was agreed as natural, slammish. Not some kind of flag.
2. With 3244/2344, you would not bid 4♠. You would initially bid 2NT as a relay to 3♣, and then bid your doubleton major. This was also agreed.
-P.J. Painter.
#9
Posted 2008-October-20, 07:21
Hmm seriously, if partner doesn't know what 5NT is, then I disagree with the bid no matter my hand.
#10
Posted 2008-October-20, 07:23
kenrexford, on Oct 20 2008, 01:37 PM, said:
Yes, it does seem odd that anyone should think they know more about your system than you do, especially given all the evidence we've seen of its exotic nature.
#11
Posted 2008-October-20, 07:43
Thus I'm left with the 'boring' answer which is that it is the same as 1NT - 5NT i.e. invitational to 7NT, forcing 6NT, but now opener evaluates their hand on the basis that they have already denied a 5-card suit.
It also must have a hand type that you can't otherwise show, but we don't know all your system. If you are 4-4 major/minor, surely you have some way to show this? That leave 3=3=(4=3).
#12
Posted 2008-October-20, 08:02
#13
Posted 2008-October-20, 09:42
gwnn, on Oct 19 2008, 05:41 PM, said:
or
quantitative to 7NT.
of course the two hands are not exactly the same but as opener I'd have bid my better minor as a safety play.
I would interpret it as quantitative to 7NT, but I would accept it conservatively and would indeed bid 6m as a safety play on many hands.
#14
Posted 2008-October-20, 09:44
kenrexford, on Oct 20 2008, 04:37 AM, said:
1. 4minor was agreed as natural, slammish. Not some kind of flag.
2. With 3244/2344, you would not bid 4♠. You would initially bid 2NT as a relay to 3♣, and then bid your doubleton major. This was also agreed.
No one corrected your pre-conditions Ken.
We (in this case I) simply said that this is how I would have bid a hand with 4-4 in the minors (i.e., 4♠). If 'you' (as you stated in the OP) have a different way to bid a hand with 4-4 in the minors, more power to you. It makes no difference; the relevance is there is already a way to show a hand with 4-4 in the minors, so 5N is not needed for pick-a-minor.
#15
Posted 2008-October-21, 13:05
I thought (obviously wrong) that this was a fairly common situation.
As to the idea of a quantitative raise to 7NT, I cannot imagine a bid of a grand on mere supposed power at IMP scoring. I think I'd be shunned for life for that sort of B.S.
So, it seems to me that this was a forcing raise to 6NT that allowed partner to reconsider one (or both) minors. If the precondition at this point was that he had to have at least one four-card major, then his only interesting pattern would be 4432. Hence, I thought 5NT asked partner to bid a 4-card minor if he has one (of interest). If not, he should just bid 6NT. What I have is irrelevant, but I must logically have one or both minors.
The table thought that 5NT was "quantitative, but really strongly invitational."
As it was, I had a hand where either meaning was OK by me, as I was, in fact, somewhat tweenish. ♠Axx ♥Axx ♦Qx ♣AQxxx. So, it worked out in the end, sort of. As it was, partner had a (aggressively) upgraded hand that he appropriately opted to show as 15 and accordingly passed wisely, but all things worked well, resulting in the heavily unfavorable slam to make (bid at the other table).
I was curious, though, how others played 5NT.
-P.J. Painter.
#16
Posted 2008-October-21, 13:36
kenrexford, on Oct 21 2008, 02:05 PM, said:
As it was, partner had a (aggressively) upgraded hand that he appropriately opted to show as 15 and accordingly passed wisely, but all things worked well, resulting in the heavily unfavorable slam to make (bid at the other table).
I don't think it is wise to pass a forcing bid because you've upgraded and are having second thoughts; either it's worth 15 or it's not, and once you've decided you need to stick with that.
#17
Posted 2008-October-21, 22:04
TimG, on Oct 21 2008, 02:36 PM, said:
kenrexford, on Oct 21 2008, 02:05 PM, said:
As it was, partner had a (aggressively) upgraded hand that he appropriately opted to show as 15 and accordingly passed wisely, but all things worked well, resulting in the heavily unfavorable slam to make (bid at the other table).
I don't think it is wise to pass a forcing bid because you've upgraded and are having second thoughts; either it's worth 15 or it's not, and once you've decided you need to stick with that.
I meant that partner passed wisely because he took 5NT as "very highly invitational," as per the table understanding of the bid.
-P.J. Painter.
#18
Posted 2008-October-21, 22:19
#19
Posted 2008-October-21, 22:44
cherdano, on Oct 21 2008, 11:19 PM, said:
I'm not saying that the table meaning made sense. I thought 5NT was 100% forcing but allowed us to consider a back-in 6♣. I agree that the table meaning seems strange.
-P.J. Painter.
#20
Posted 2008-October-21, 22:46
- hrothgar

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