2024 Retro Edition – August Week 2

What’s your call?

3♠ 3NT
4♣ 4 4 4♠ 4NT
5♣ 5 5 5♠ 5NT
6♣ 6 6 6♠ 6NT
7♣ 7 7 7♠ 7NT
Pass
Click to reveal awards

Panelists
August Boehm, Larry Cohen, Mel Colchamiro, Allan Falk, Geoff Hampson, Betty Ann Kennedy, Daniel Korbel, Mike Lawrence, Roger Lee, Jeff Meckstroth, Jill Meyers, Barry Rigal, Steve Robinson, Kerri Sanborn, Don Stack, The Sutherlins, Steve Weinstein
The Coroner’s Rule

Lee likes 2♠ – he really, really likes it. “The alternatives of 2 and 3NT do not appeal to me.” He bids 4 now to show a good 4 bid. “4♣ puts too much focus on the club suit, and 4 isn’t enough. 4 tells partner I have a maximum with two or three hearts and (probably) short diamonds, and I can live with that.”

Sanborn calls 2♠ the better of poor options. “At least spades could be a playable strain, while diamonds … ? Probably not. Over 3, I bid 4 . My hand has grown in value facing the six- or good five-card heart suit. But I don’t have enough to take over. All I can suggest is a fit and slam interest.”

Meckstroth is lukewarm on 2♠ (“could also bid 3NT over 1 showing a big hand with good clubs”) and moves forward with 4 – cuebid for hearts.

Meyers is in the same camp. “I don’t mind 2♠,” she says, “but I might bid 3NT – I am 50/50 on those two bids.” Nor does she love her next call – 4 : “What if partner has K Q J x x x and another card? Slam is not out of the picture. I have too many controls not to make a try.”

The Sutherlins hate 2♠. “A jump shift in a three-card major is dangerous. If partner has four-card spade support, he will raise and raise and raise.” Over partner’s 3, they bid 4 . “We have too much to raise to 4 and we need to send a message. Partner will read this as intended: Too late to propose that diamonds are trump.”

Korbel doesn’t particularly like 2♠. “It seems much better either to open 2♣ or to jump to 3NT after opening 1♣.” He bids 4 now. “Having successfully gotten away with the 2♠ call, I must make the bid that agrees hearts as trumps and allows partner the most encouragement.”

Colchamiro dislikes 2♠, too, preferring 3NT. “I hate jump shifting into an unreal major, especially spades. And besides, 3NT more or less describes my hand – long, strong clubs and a good hand suitable for notrump.” He, too, suggests 4 . “Assuming partner has six hearts, I have a great hand. Partner should expect shortness here, given the auction. It’s safer than blasting 4NT.”

Hampson, who likes 2♠, now bids 4. “I don’t think I’m strong enough for a 4 slam try in hearts.”

Lawrence offers a “qualified maybe” on the 2♠ call. “The auction would have been easier if I reversed with 2 instead. I hate the position I am in now. Because I have to bid something, I choose 4. No pride in this.”

Stack says he can live with the jump shift into a three-card suit. “I have to agree, but not because I like the bid. Seemingly the only alternative bid that is forcing is 2 , and reversing into a one-card suit with 7–1 has no appeal at all!” He bids 4. “I would like to bid 4♣ as a raise to 4, but I don’t think 4♣ is even forcing.”

Rigal, who is kind of OK with 2♠ (“an impossible call in standard methods”) bids 4. “With the K an incalculable value, simply raising what rates to be a six-carder puts the ball in partner’s court. Let’s hope he returns it in an appropriate fashion.”

Having painted himself into a corner where he dare not bid 3NT, Falk’s next call is 4. “I propose the Coroner’s Rule: ‘Supporting partner when it is at all reasonable to do so won’t get you savaged in the postmortem.’”

After a lukewarm endorsement of 2♠, Cohen offers 4♣. “If partner bids hearts a third time, I’ll yield. Even if I survive the first round of diamonds in 3NT, I’d be better off in 5♣ (at IMPs) opposite, say,

♠K x K Q x x x 10 x x x ♣x x.

Bidding 2♠ didn’t show clubs, so I think I owe partner a rebid.”

Boehm would have preferred 2 to 2♠. “I can more readily correct diamonds to notrump than fight off spade raises. 2 also saves bidding space, which I’m apt to need with this hard-to-describe hand.” He follows up with 4♣, “trying to come clean” after the 2♠ call he didn’t like.

4♣ by Kennedy, who had no problem with 2♠. “I don’t want to conceal a good seven-card suit.”


The Zoom Room is available Monday through Friday, 3:30 pm-5:30 pm (Eastern).

Getting help is easier than ever with the ACBL Zoom Chat service.
Simply click the "Join Zoom Chat" button below to be taken to our dedicated zoom room.
Once there, click the "Launch Meeting" button to start your session. To hear us and vice-versa - don't forget to "Join with computer audio."

If the Zoom Room isn't available and you need answers, you can email us at membership@acbl.org.

Join Zoom Chat