Worth a vul accept?
#1
Posted 2014-December-21, 15:14
ATxx
xx
Kxxxx
Unfav, teams, you dealer. The bidding unfolds thusly:
P 1S /
1N 3S
Do you raise?
#2
Posted 2014-December-21, 15:32
#3
Posted 2014-December-21, 15:49
#6
Posted 2014-December-22, 04:12
To me, there's an element of too many losers between the 2 hands, and if partner has a mediocre 16 or 17 count without top controls, 4 ♠ may go down, but you don't win bridge matches by passing on such hands in my opinion.
#9
Posted 2014-December-22, 07:19
#10
Posted 2014-December-22, 07:27
#12
Posted 2014-December-22, 08:25
daffydoc, on 2014-December-22, 08:00, said:
That feels like quite a significant change. For eg, you could change the club king to the QJ, and my guess is people would still pass?
I think I phrased it misleadingly with 'minimum change'. What I meant to ask is something like 'adjusting the hand so it's as close as possible to the OP hand in playing strength, what is the strongest recognisable version of it on which you'd pass?'
#15
Posted 2014-December-22, 10:01
#16
Posted 2014-December-22, 15:43
#17
Posted 2014-December-22, 20:52
#18
Posted 2014-December-23, 10:12
#19
Posted 2014-December-23, 14:48
Also, make sure you partner isn't jumping around with 15's.
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#20
Posted 2014-December-23, 15:46
Phil, on 2014-December-23, 14:48, said:
Also, make sure you partner isn't jumping around with 15's.
Depends on the 15:)
Obviously whether we land in a good game depends on the degree of mesh between our hands, and we have no way of finding that out. However, we have an Ace, a King, the trump 10x, and a potential ruff. The odds are good that our 4 plus features, when partner won't be expecting more than 1 or 2, are enough to give us play.
To give one easy example: give partner AQJxxx and our 10 allows us to advance the 10 and remain in dummy should the K be onside (assuming no cover), while xx would mean finding 2 entries to dummy to pick up Kxx onside. Little edges like that have real value.