a***@yahoo.co.uk
2019-02-16 20:22:58 UTC
Here is a problem hand which happened on an cross-IMP evening, and following this, partner and I agreed that we need a rigorous way of showing various types of hands after intervention (we think the lack of a decent structure is one primary cause of our persistent poor results).
North
AK5432
A96
AK6
6
South
Q96
QJT
Q953
AT5
5 card majors, NS vuln
N E S W
1S 3C X P
3D P 3S P
4S
Unfortunately I had an awkward hand over the 3C overcall. I can show a weak shapely hand with support easily enough (bid 3S), and show a game going or better hand (4S or cue), but couldn't think of a way to show this flat 11 count with support, which wants to be in game if partner has a decent opener. I decided to improvise as best as I could and double, then show support, hoping partner would infer I held an invitational hand with 3 or 4 spades. She couldn't visualise me potentially holding a hand where every honor card is working, so we missed 6S. This was a 5 imp loss as two pairs found the slam, although given what the 3C was bid on I very much doubt they had to deal with that East bid.
My questions are:
1. Is there a way to distinguish between constructive and shapely support in this situation?
2. When it comes to showing support over non-jump overcalls, is there a consensus as to how to treat a direct raise and a cue bid? I've tended to use direct raises as shapely, not strong in HCP, and a cue bid as showing a constructive raise (e.g. invitational or better), or fishing for 3NT, is this a reasonable approach? I think there is something called support doubles as well but I am not familiar with them.
North
AK5432
A96
AK6
6
South
Q96
QJT
Q953
AT5
5 card majors, NS vuln
N E S W
1S 3C X P
3D P 3S P
4S
Unfortunately I had an awkward hand over the 3C overcall. I can show a weak shapely hand with support easily enough (bid 3S), and show a game going or better hand (4S or cue), but couldn't think of a way to show this flat 11 count with support, which wants to be in game if partner has a decent opener. I decided to improvise as best as I could and double, then show support, hoping partner would infer I held an invitational hand with 3 or 4 spades. She couldn't visualise me potentially holding a hand where every honor card is working, so we missed 6S. This was a 5 imp loss as two pairs found the slam, although given what the 3C was bid on I very much doubt they had to deal with that East bid.
My questions are:
1. Is there a way to distinguish between constructive and shapely support in this situation?
2. When it comes to showing support over non-jump overcalls, is there a consensus as to how to treat a direct raise and a cue bid? I've tended to use direct raises as shapely, not strong in HCP, and a cue bid as showing a constructive raise (e.g. invitational or better), or fishing for 3NT, is this a reasonable approach? I think there is something called support doubles as well but I am not familiar with them.