My options? Playing Standard American.
#1
Posted 2025-December-19, 20:23
♠ 987
♥ AQJ9
♦ AQT6
♣ 53
Partner (East) opens with 1D, South passed, I bid 1H, and North overcalled 1S. Partner passed. South passed. Playing Standard American, what are your suggestions for my bid?
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"If a man speaks in the forest and there are no women around to hear is he still wrong?" anon
"Politics: an inadequate substitute for bridge." John Maynard Keynes
"This is how Europe works, it dithers, it delays, it makes cowardly small steps towards the truth and at some point that which it has admonished as impossible it embraces as inevitable." Athens University economist Yanis Varoufakis
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"Doing is the real hard part" Emma Coats (formerly from Pixar)
"I was working on the proof of one of my poems all the morning, and took out a comma. In the afternoon I put it back again." Oscar Wilde
"Assessment, far more than religion, has become the opiate of the people" Patricia Broadfoot, Uni of Gloucestershire, UK
#2
Posted 2025-December-19, 21:39
Give partner perhaps
Jxx..xx.. KJxxx...AKx
You might try two spades...
Maybe
Qxx...xx...Kxxxx..AKx?
#3
Posted 2025-December-19, 21:59
X <3♥
1N implies lack of ♠ guard ?
2♣ <4♣ ?
2♦ <6♦ ?
So 3253 ?
Your hand has some play for 4♦ opposite a min. with 3♠ losers so do you really want to invite 3N/5♦?
How accurate is partner's bidding? 2♠ could jog their memory and shut the ops. out or 3♦.
#6
Posted 2025-December-19, 23:36
Forgot support double, reluctant to bid 1nt?
"100% certain that many excellent players would disagree. This is far more about style/judgment than right vs. wrong." Fred
#7
Posted 2025-December-20, 02:37
#8
Posted 2025-December-20, 02:58
Thanks for the suggestions. Actually, I was playing East. I held:
♠ KT54
♥ 65
♦ J952
♣ AKQ
The full bidding:
E...S..W..N
1D P 1H 1S
P P 2D all pass
I asked my question, pretending to be West, hoping your answers would help me to better understand my partner's dilemma and options.
My go-to bid in West's situation is to "cue bid" the opponent's suit, that is, I would bid 2S. I would take that as a general directive to keep bidding: "Tell me more about your hand, partner".
I can understand my partner's annoyance that I didn't immediately bid 1NT to show stoppers. But I know that there have been other similar situations where, holding cards in an opponent's suit, I have passed to "await developments". And that pass has worked out fine.
A related question:
I took partner's 2D bid as minimum support, so I passed. We play "inverted minors". Are inverted minors still on in this situation? Our general agreement is that they are off in competition.
"Of course wishes everybody to win and play as good as possible, but it is a hobby and a game, not war." 42 (BBO Forums)
"If a man speaks in the forest and there are no women around to hear is he still wrong?" anon
"Politics: an inadequate substitute for bridge." John Maynard Keynes
"This is how Europe works, it dithers, it delays, it makes cowardly small steps towards the truth and at some point that which it has admonished as impossible it embraces as inevitable." Athens University economist Yanis Varoufakis
"Krypt3ia @ Craig, dude, don't even get me started on you. You have posted so far two articles that I and others have found patently clueless. So please, step away from the keyboard before you hurt yourself." Comment on infosecisland.com
"Doing is the real hard part" Emma Coats (formerly from Pixar)
"I was working on the proof of one of my poems all the morning, and took out a comma. In the afternoon I put it back again." Oscar Wilde
"Assessment, far more than religion, has become the opiate of the people" Patricia Broadfoot, Uni of Gloucestershire, UK
#9
Posted 2025-December-20, 05:03
Pass is descriptive and does not deny a spade stopper.
Inverted minors refers only to a direct raise of a minor suit opening, not to later round bids.
#11
Posted 2025-December-20, 08:48
In 1960s Goren, 3♦ as a forcing diamond raise would work for West, but Standard American had switched to invitational jump raises. Also, the idea that you just ignore opponent bidding in the meaning of your bids is 50 years outdated.
Neither double nor 2♠ is defined for West in standard american. Someone who had not learned otherwise and had not thought about the proper construction of bidding systems might assume that double is penalty and 2♠ shows spades. Both of those are terrible agreements, but beginners think of bidding systems as coming from stone tablets, not as something that can be modified.
Even if West thinks double and 2♠ are something sensible, those bids just might not occur to them.
When, as East, you are playing with a novice (possibly a very experienced novice), you have a choice (which, ideally, partner should agree on). You can make the technically superior bids and plays, helping partner learn what they are and how to work with them, or you can make the bids that partner will understand, optimizing for partner's comfort and your results. Passing might be the technically superior bid as East, but 1N would have made West's life easier.
#12
Posted 2025-December-20, 09:06
pescetom, on 2025-December-20, 06:47, said:
I understand that West might have an easier time over 1NT, but (even for beginners) I think it is debatable whether that means it's a better action. It scores better on this deal, but if double and 2♠ by West are truly undefined on the actual auction I expert the partnership to benefit from having a poor score once and discussing after.
#15
Posted 2025-December-20, 16:08
DavidKok, on 2025-December-20, 09:06, said:
Thanks, agree with all of that too: just checking to see if I understood and sensibilities match. I would have bid 1NT because it fits and makes partner's life easier, but Pass is not far off and I would not expect him to get it wrong.
#16
Posted 2025-December-20, 18:09
After holding a few events that were massive in their under expected attendance, they realized that all those complainers really meant "hey, don't take away our useful tools, just their weird stuff" and it quietly died on the vine.
Until some Californian nobody who was lonely doing grad work in Sweden decided to use this newfangled academic network to play bridge with his girlfriend and other friends back home, so wrote an OK server and client. He found pretty quickly that one of the problems with playing with randoms from all over the world is that they didn't share a bidding system, and couldn't there be something we could default to? And lo and behold, there on the ACBL web site was this *booklet* explaining a system, and basically everybody (except the Poles) could play it (even if it wasn't their preference)!
Nobody can play SAYC - even those who claim they do so. I know - I've tried. Most don't. It was the previous century when A. B. wrote "you are given the information that your opponents play SAYC, but all that means is that they can find the letters "S", "A", "Y", and "C" on their keyboard." It truly has not got better.
And no, it is nowhere near close to what I would expect from a Standard American pair today, who play negative doubles through 3♠ if not 4♦ (and probably responsive and support doubles), obviously inverted minors (which means the strength of 2♦ raise is "inverted"), some form of Keycard Blackwood, some non-YC agreement about when 4♣ is Gerber, probably some conventional defence to 1NT, ...
#17
Posted 2025-December-20, 23:52
DavidKok, on 2025-December-20, 09:06, said:
Only if partner wants to discuss and will remember the discussion two weeks from now.
The kind of life novice who knows double and 2♠ are artificial here but won't think of either bid when the possibility of it comes up won't think of them next time or the time after either. Maybe after a couple years if their partner makes the bids enough and points it out a few times, but that's far from guaranteed.
#18
Posted Yesterday, 05:14
As a partnership you do not want to see the bidding go 1♦ - p - 1♥ - 1♠ - 1NT - X where East has a minimal opening with a spade stopper and a ♥ misfit, south had a trap pass over 1♦ and west has a meagre 6HCP 4/5 card ♥ without a 2♦ escape, that will NOT end well.
Because of this East having w minimum opening without 3♥ and with or without ♠ stopped is the most logical explanation for his pass, to me this is implied bridge logic, you don't need to discuss explicitly. Even though some suggest 1NT on the actual hand would have been easier, yes, but it would be completely wrong imho. Imagine this -300 or -100 against nothing nightmare:
So yes, I agree West needs to bid 2♠ looking for 2/3NT, and possible bailing out at 3/4♦ if there is no ♠ stop.

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