respond to double
#22
Posted 2011-August-15, 05:17
We just found out in another thread that a standard 1♣ opener has, a priori, about a 50% chance of having 3 or 4 cards, don't you think the chances of that are much, much higher seeing as we have 5?
George Carlin
#23
Posted 2011-August-15, 09:18
For those who fear AK9xx(x) behind us, with enough values between declarer and dummy that we do badly, let me suggest you start looking at glasses as sometimes at least half full rather than virtually empty.
If we are going to 'place cards' (which we shouldn't when the auction is so ill-defined), why not place them as follows:
Obviously, I am not passing in the belief that the hands look anything like these, but when we are terrifying ourselves with unlikely and bad-for-us layouts, why not visualize something nice as a counter-balance?
#25
Posted 2011-August-15, 10:11
Antrax, on 2011-August-15, 10:09, said:
Firstly, I don't 'expect' West to have that exact hand, nor partner to hold what he has in that diagram...I was merely trying to point out that negative thinking is a bad habit, and that one can counter that tendency (to which I often fall victim at the table) by thinking positively.
Secondly, look at the hand again and tell me where West is going that gets him to a better spot than you were getting by pulling the double. 1♠ doubled? You were going to get more than 800 by bidding, were you?
Note that I could have made things even worse for EW by giving West the same high cards but 3=3=3=4 shape with one of dummy's small clubs, and making dummy 4=4=3=2 and making N 5=3=3=2...he'd still double because he'd be too strong for 1♠. Now where is he going?
Anyway, your question suggests you missed the point. Cognitive dissonance appears frequently in these fora....people see points of view contrary to theirs, and even tho the points of view are explained by reasoning, people tend to ignore the reasoning and find any excuse to cling to their opinion rather than to acknowledge any validity in the contrary opinion. Thus you argue that we won't collect our 1400 against 1♣ because they may run to -800, and you proffer that as a reason to not pass 1♣. Odd.
#26
Posted 2011-August-15, 10:17
Antrax, on 2011-August-15, 10:09, said:
Do you expect West to bid 1♠, just to discover that East actually has 4 clubs and only a singleton spade?
-- Bertrand Russell
#27
Posted 2011-August-15, 10:54
I read somewhere that even when playing 5CM, usually a 1♣ opener has a 4+ card suit. Is that incorrect?
#28
Posted 2011-August-15, 10:59
The thread with the exact numbers is here:
http://www.bridgebas...ility-question/
The estimates for 3-4 clubs are somewhere between 40 and 50% for all estimates.
George Carlin
#29
Posted 2011-August-15, 11:03
#30
Posted 2011-August-15, 11:16
George Carlin
#31
Posted 2011-August-15, 11:20
The passers feel that whatever happens, they will be enroute to at least as good, if not better final result than if they had bid. I don't pass, and would bid 1D. But I surely can see how that decision could miss out on a bigger penalty.
#32
Posted 2011-August-15, 11:37
This means that the a priori odds of opener holding long(ish) clubs are somewhat reduced.
Indeed, my main concern about defending is not when partner has a minimum takeout double...my concern is that he has a powerful one-suiter, possession of which negates the inferences I draw about opener's club length. Now there is a risk of 500 against 600 or 620, in addition to the risk of their making.
But partners tend to hold semi-balanced takeout doubles of all strength ranges more often than they hold single-suit monsters.
#33
Posted 2011-August-15, 11:45
gwnn, on 2011-August-15, 11:16, said:
Haven't we seen several posts in which strong players (and others) advocated takeout doubles on 4=3=3=3 or 3=4=3=3 shape with, say, 14 hcp, on the basis that it is better to double and go quiet than to pass and have to contemplate backing in or getting shut out?
We all double, and think it routine, on AJxx AQx Axx xxx, don't we? And a 4=4=3=2 is a another routine double. So while I am not choosing my pass on the basis that partner 'rates' to have xx or better in clubs, I certainly won't pull based on his 'rating' to have a stiff.
Btw, if it is a stiff, why can't it be the 9, or why can't dummy hold the 9? After all, if we give lho AKxxx, the odds are 50-50 that the 9 is in either partner's hand or in dummy.
#34
Posted 2011-August-15, 12:06
With me leading hearts through the opening bidder (and the ♠Q) we don't need a bunch of trump tricks and may have them.
Also, if they pull to something that we decide not to double a 1nt bid by me now describes this hand nicely, better than a direct 1nt which could be much flatter with much shorter/weaker clubs.
Partner will not fear notrump as an option after we pass and if we have game, 3nt is the only one that looks likely to me.
A 1♦ bid could be made on xxx, xxx, xxx, xxxx in the extreme and is much too conservative at matchpoints when you MAY have them by the throat.
What is baby oil made of?
#36
Posted 2011-August-15, 12:58
#37
Posted 2011-August-15, 14:27
mgoetze, on 2011-August-15, 10:17, said:
Sitting for 1C X with AKx would be absolutely horrible. Sitting for 1C X p on 1C X p p is almost always going to be wrong, but with only 3 of them it is really crazy!
#38
Posted 2011-August-15, 14:40
JLOGIC, on 2011-August-15, 14:27, said:
I agree with this: but if he has only 3 ♣s, then he is 4=3=3=3/3=4=3=3/4=4=2=3 and (presumably) less than a strong 1N, so where is he going to go, with any success?
(ok, he MIGHT be on 18-19, if partner is on a minimum, but we can't base our bidding on that as a strong possibiity, and even then, passing may well be right....we double the runout to 1N and a club lead may carve it up)
And, of course, when he is on a 3 bagger, the odds are that his partner will hold 3 or even 4. Imagine responder with 3=3=3=4 and opener with 4=3=3=3 (doubler 5=4=3=1 big). Go ahead....make my partner's day by playing 1♠
While pass comes with no guarantees, it offers a huge upside with sufficient frequency that imo it is the call at any form of scoring.
#39
Posted 2011-August-15, 15:01
I am not optimistic about defending 1S X either if partner chooses to double. Partner will double 1S in my book with a holding as weak as KTxx. In fact, 655321 said he would not even sit for 1S X.
That is a debatable view, but also not a reason to not pass 1C X.
My first priority is "I'll be happy defending 1C X" if they opps can/will/should run and if that will or will not be profitable, I have no idea, I'll cross that bridge when I come to it, but I don't think I gain anything by just bidding 1N to begin with.
I just wanted to emphasize that one should extremely often run on the auction 1C X p p for the sake of getting it out there since it is an important bridge lesson, regardless of our decision on this hand.
#40
Posted 2011-August-15, 15:11
3 : 19.6%
4 : 29.8%
5+: 50.5%
giving us the hand from the OP:
3 : 35.6%
4 : 37.7%
5+: 26.6%
giving N a t/o double:
3: 31.1%
4: 41.9%
5: 27.0%
for a 1C opener I used 12+ hcp, always from 33 in the minors, never from 44, discard 15-17 balanced, discard any 20+, discard 5 card majors
for a t/o double I used 12+ hcp, 3-4 card in both majors, 3-5 cards in diamonds, 0-2 cards in clubs.
So yes, the takeout double does make LHO a little longer, but not a lot. And my 80% estimate was off, it is only slightly higher than 70%.
edit: the way I like doubling is 2-5 cards in diamonds, any number of clubs (but I do not double with 3-3-2-5 ). just out of curiosity I ran the script for these loose doubles too:
3 : 42.1%
4 : 39.0%
5+: 18.8%
Obviously this case is slightly silly, but the one I used above is slightly too strident.
All of these cases I ran for 100k matching hands each.
George Carlin