Post by nullevoidPost by CarlVulnerability and/or scoring is not given;
uncontested auction, playing 2/1.
Q1062 K83 42 K1087
Is it simply a bad choice to respond 1S or is this open to debate?
Has your answer changed over the last say, 25 years?
Thanks,
Carl
You know you've got half the points in the deck and eight hearts between
you. You need to find out how much more, if any, you two have. To do
that, you need some room. If nobody interferes you can give yourself
that room by bidding the spades. Where's any possible downside?
Your partner hears, "one spade," and concludes you've got, what? Four
spades and at least six points? He's not going to do anything bizarre
with that innocuous information and if he supports your spades with a
single raise you're going to pass. You'll wind up playing two spades
with a four/four fit instead of his playing two hearts with a five/three
fit and either one's got about the same chance of making. In fact, it's
been my experience that the four/four is easier to play since there's
more two-way transportation (although is kinda nice to see that
five-card suit and dream that they'll each take a trick and you only
have to worry about three outside).
So, one spade is "not simply a bad choice," it's the right choice;
twenty-five years ago I like to think I'd have answered the same way.
After 1h 1s ?, does opener PROMISE 4 spades when he raises to 2s?
What would opener rebid with
AJx
AKxxx
xxxx
x
or
Axx
Jxxxxx
AKx
x
or
xxx
AQxxx
AKx
xx
In each case, I would raise to 2s instead of rebidding 2d (hand 1), 2h
(hand 2), or 1nt (hand 3).
Even in a 4-card major context, the standard Goren view was what with
2 biddable touching suits, the correct preparatory opening bid would
be the higher ranking suit, therefore 1s, so if opener is 4=4 majors,
his spades are bad and his hearts could be better.
I would be interested to read about any recognized bidding authority
(book, MSC, Challenge the champs, etc) who advocated hiding heart
support with a weak hand and 4=3 majors. I certainly don't know any
and I've been reading about bridge since the mid 1970s, almost 40
years now.
Henrysun909