Vampyr, on 2012-May-19, 14:58, said:
LOL no, it would not cross the mind of anyone to make a double that shows 5-2 in two suits when holding 6-3.
The hand posted above was exploring further the question asked in post 16 (repeated here for convenience):
32519, on 2012-May-16, 16:06, said:
Regarding the Snapdragon Double, what is the expert consensus on the following?
1. The minimum number of HCP promised by the fourth hand? (6-7-8-?)
2. The minimum number of cards promised in the fourth suit? I have heard some absolutely insisting on a minimum of 6-cards in the fourth suit. Others have been heard to say a 5-card suit is sufficient if it is a reasonable suit e.g. AQJxx. Do you agree or disagree with this?
Including 6-cards in the fourth suit was therefore done intentionally. A 5-card misfit in the fourth suit is discussed at the end of this post.
The hand posted above was also exploring further the suggestion made by chasetb in post 17 to allow 3 cards in partners suit (repeated here for convenience):
chasetb, on 2012-May-17, 12:16, said:
While I don't play Snapdragon, I would go with honor-doubleton in partner's suit, and generally a decent 5-card suit. However, unlike some other people, I would also do it with 3 baby cards in partner's suit if balanced, and/or a weakish 6-card suit. I would say you should have a minimum of 7 HCP, but where the honors are and the spot cards are more important than outright HCP.
Therefore, including 3-cards in partner’s suit was also done intentionally.
Vampyr, on 2012-May-19, 14:58, said:
A fit jump might do the trick.
After reading more about fit jumps
over here and
over here I’m not convinced that they are applicable when all four players are bidding. You can quite easily end up in a disaster like this:
When the bidding goes: 1
♣-1
♦-1
♥-2
♠ (fit jump), you are forced to 3
♦. With the HCP favouring the opponents they now trot out the red card and you end up red-faced! The Snapdragon Double keeps the bidding lower. It also keeps you out of trouble.
The first article stipulates the criteria for Fit Showing Jumps as the following:
1. A good 5+ card suit, typically with 2-3 working honours
2. 4+ cards in partner’s suit, preferably 5 when partner bids a minor suit
3. 10-11 HCP, perhaps shaded with primary honour controls
4. An unbalanced distribution, preferably with a singleton or void (no flatter than a 5-4-2-2 shape)
The first hand posted is out of kilter with Fit Showing Jumps, both regarding HCP and the number of cards promised in partner’s suit. It is also out of kilter regarding a (normal) FSJ sequence.