Mike’s Bidding Quiz


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1. When partner makes a takeout double, what do I do with only a few high-card points?

2. What about distribution? Can that influence my decision?

When partner doubles an opening bid for takeout, you will have decisions to make. Keep in mind that high-card points are not the only factor to consider when making your response. The following quiz will help you with some important principles. You are South.

West North East South
1 Dbl Pass ?

1. ♠ 10 8 7 4 3   Q 9 8 7 4   8   ♣ Q 6

See Mike's Advice

Bid 1♠, but be ready to come alive on the next round. You intend to follow with 2, maybe more if partner shows extras. For instance, if opener passes and partner raises to 2♠, you know he has four spades and about 17 support points. You should give extra value to your shape and your useful high-card points and bid game. 4♠ should be a good spot.

2. ♠ 7 3   9 8 3   8 7 4 3   ♣ A K J 7

See Mike's Advice

Bid 2♣. This is about as many high-card points as you are likely to have. If you had more, you would make a stronger bid. One more jack and one more club would make this a 3♣ bid. If your partner bids again over your 2♣, you probably have a game. For instance, if your partner bids 2 next, you should raise to 4.

3. ♠ 7 6 3   9 8 7 3   Q 5   ♣ J 9 8 3

See Mike's Advice

Bid 1. When you have a four-card major and a four-card minor, choose the major suit. That, more than anything, is what partner is looking for.

4. ♠ K 2   Q J 7 6 5 3   10 8 7 4   ♣ 8
See Mike's Advice

Bid 2. This hand is a ringer. The point of this bid is to introduce you to an important concept. Your six-card suit and distribution make this hand worth nearly 10 support points. With hands this good, you must make a stronger bid than a simple 1. More on this next week.

5. ♠ 6 3   Q 9 8 7 6 3   8 7 3   ♣ 10 7
See Mike's Advice

Bid 1. This is not a good hand, but it has something that you should learn to love. Your little hand with only 2 high-card points has a six-card suit, and your partner is promising support. If the auction goes quietly, you may be able to bid again. For example, if you bid 1, and opener rebids 2, you should bid 2 if you get the chance. For the record, this is a much better hand than:

♠ Q 7 4   8 7 4 3   Q 8 4   ♣ Q 9 5

This hand has three times as many high-card points as hand No. 5, but the shape is horrible. The little hand with its six-card suit has promise because there are enough hearts for you to be certain that the suit will be more than adequate as trump.

6. ♠ K 3   8   8 7 6 3   ♣ Q J 5 4 3 2
See Mike's Advice

Bid 2♣. Let me show you something interesting. Suppose this diagram shows your hand (South) and partner’s:

North
♠ A J 7 4
A 7 4 3
2
♣ A 8 7 6
South
♠ K 3
8
8 7 6 3
♣ Q J 5 4 3 2

If nothing bad happens, your 6-point hand will take 12 tricks facing this 13-point dummy if the club and spade finesses win. The opening bidder is likely to have the important high cards, so game is not a bad bet. The point of this? Do not be sad when you have a weak but shapely hand. Be optimistic.