BunnyGo, on 2012-February-29, 10:50, said:
AKxx, x, Qxxx, Axxx
This is not 'near-maximum' this is simply a solid "traditional shaped" balancing double.
This is what I intended by "near-maximum." Since I am giving partner a king of mine, this would be 16 HCP and a heart singleton. This is what I meant. Let me change it from "near-maximum" to "solid", i.e., moderately better than minimum opening bid, and my comment stands.
The reality is, this example hand is at least 2 tricks better than it has to be.
BunnyGo, on 2012-February-29, 10:50, said:
Because responder didn't make a pre-emptive raise? You could be right, and he could be lighter than a full opener to protect us. Don't play bridge scared, especially with a shapely control heavy hand at IMPs. This is why I wouldn't blast 4, but would certainly bid 3. I understand bidding only 2, but I think that one should bring partner in on the joke that we have a really nice hand if he has some spade controls for us.
Given that there are no relevant agreements, you're saying you should jump the bidding on a hand that barely qualifies for a free bid?
BunnyGo, on 2012-February-29, 10:50, said:
I said he MIGHT have strained.
BunnyGo, on 2012-February-29, 10:50, said:
Thank god, I thought I was sick for a second. This is insane. See hand presented above. Is partner supposed to blast 4 with that hand?
If he trusts me to have nothing wasted in hearts and values for a free bid, absolutely. Hence my caveat about "partner possibly being an underbidder."
BunnyGo, on 2012-February-29, 10:50, said:
I'd suggest that I'm being unfair to somebody who probably has not played a lot of IMPs and mostly plays matchpoints, but the auction you're suggesting of passing partners double and raise is as scared as I've ever seen someone bid.
With no special agreements, I'm not blasting game on a weak suit, 8 losers, and the possiblity of every suit breaking badly. I'd rather have something in reserve for my bid later if the auction comes back to me.
BunnyGo, on 2012-February-29, 10:50, said:
Really? I'd be more likely to turn the cube if partner made forcing bids until we were in 4♠ than congratulate them. If partner can find a 3♥ bid over my 2♠ and then (as you suggested) raise my 3♠ continuation to 4, I'd be more worried about missing 6 than going down, even on bad splits.
This doesn't make sense. I'm saying that I'm bidding 2 spades, not 3. If partner carries me to 4 spades after I've conservatively bid 2, then I might turn the cube as well. I'm saying, if I bid 3 spades and partner carries on to 4 and gets doubled, I'd be looking for the 'EXIT' sign.
BunnyGo, on 2012-February-29, 10:50, said:
You must have been sawed off in a lot of contracts. Bidding scared is losing bridge. If partner has the hand you suggested then:
a) he's not likely raising my 3♠ to 4
b) He wouldn't be forcing my 2♠ to 4
c) I'm not in terrible shape on lots of lies, leads, and lines
I recommend you practice getting to "hopeless" contracts more and seeing if you can bring them home, I think you'll either be surprised and reevaluate your pessimism or find you need practice as a declarer if many of the "hopeless" contracts are makeable but you went down.
Wait, so one succeeds in tournaments by making Landy game tries?
BunnyGo, on 2012-February-29, 10:50, said:
It is not my style to overcall this hand, but it's not too far off, it has been the style of some of my partnerships, and when Justin says he'd do it, I don't respond, "that's ludicrous", I respond, "huh...let me reconsider..." It doesn't mean I'll overcall on it in the future, but I'll think about the fact that good players are overcalling on it.
I recommend you reread the Tips for Forum Newbies again. And please tone back the hyperbole, it makes you sound like you don't know what you're talking about--I'm being kind, because you may, but you haven't demonstrated this fact yet.
There is nothing hyperbolic about calling the overcall idea ludicrous, in my opinion. It is an overbid, it can cost as much as -1100, and there won't be any games missed if you or partner can't act later in the hand in the vast majority of scenarios. This hand has nice diamond and club controls, but there are far too many hands partner could produce that will have no shot at game. 2
♠ says "I have a free bid," which I do, barely. Barely.
If your partnership agreements are different, fine. But that's in direct violation of the prompt at the beginning of the problem.