Tom Dodd was the designated moderator this month, but he had a recent death in his family so I'm going to fill in for him. Tom will be back on duty for the August Forum. Since I was a panelist up until yesterday, I'm going to include some of my own answers for this forum. A little weird, but we've been weirder.
| Action | Score | Votes | % Solvers |
| Pass | 100 | 8 | 12 |
| DBL | 80 | 5 | 22 |
| 3NT | 70 | 4 | 20 |
| 3D | 50 | 0 | 2 |
| 6NT | 00 | 0 | 1 |
| XX | 00 | 0 | 1 |
1. IMPs, Both Vulnerable
| West | North | East | South |
| -- | -- | 1![]() |
DBL |
3 * |
Pass | Pass | ? |
| * Pre-emptive | |||
As South you hold:
K6
A1042
AQJ10
AQ6
What's your bid?
I don't know if I can help with this one, it usually takes me about three hands to accumulate that many HCP. But...some of the panelists weren't impressed!
WALKER: Pass. Defending looks like our best shot at a plus score. Even if partner has an unlikely 5 or 6 points, 3NT is probably
doomed with a club lead and few, if any, dummy entries.
KESSLER: Pass. Trying for a plus. Double would be nice with one more spade, but now over 3S we have no appetizing call.
HUDSON: Pass. Stay fixed.
BRIDGE BARON: Pass. Partner could be broke.
FEILER: Pass. Maybe the small plus in 3C singled will turn out ok when a lot of people overbid with all these HCP.
Wow, that last panelist is a smooth talker, isn't he? The DBLers were a mixed bag, a few thought DBL was penalty, but most assumed it was a second takeout double and were dreaming sweet dreams about a non-spade response.
VONGSVIVUT: DBL. Should be penalty oriented.
WALSH: DBL. Double is uncomfortable - I will be endplayed at trick one - but still I think we're a favorite to beat it.
SPEAR: DBL. Hoping to reach 4H or a diamond partial, but bidding 3N over 3S and hoping there is some play--passing is
not an option.
BERNHARD: DBL. Letting them play 3 clubs would get me 20% board so what's the risk, If partner bids 3 spades I
will------ I have no clue.
It's better to stand on the highway in front of an oncoming 18-wheeler than to stand between a bridge player and 3NT.
MERRITT: 3NT. My plan was to double and bid no trump. I started with the double and now...
BABIN: 3NT. I would double again , but partner will probably bid 3 spades , I will just bid 3NT & hope partner has a few
points.
| Action | Score | Votes | % Solvers |
| 5D | 100 | 10 | 17 |
| 6H | 80 | 2 | 6 |
| Pass | 70 | 3 | 18 |
| 4NT | 60 | 1 | 2 |
| 5H | 50 | 1 | 10 |
| 5S | 40 | 0 | 2 |
| 7H | 30 | 0 | 1 |
| 6D | 00 | 0 | 1 |
| XX | 00 | 0 | 1 |
2. Matchpoints, Both Vulnerable
| West | North | East | South |
3![]() |
4 * |
Pass | 4![]() |
| Pass | 4![]() |
Pass | ? |
| * Majors | |||
As South you hold:
Q5
Q1042
K6
97652
What's your bid?
Not much there, but it's good stuff! At least that's what my old dope dealer used to say, or maybe it was my old girlfriend! But is it enough to bid on, and if it is, how should we proceed?
MAYNE: 5D. Partner can't cancel the previous message; he's got everything. One cooperative move seems necessary, even
if partner mistakes it for first-round control.
MATHENY: 5D. Don't know if it's enough but everything I have is working.
MERRITT: 5D. I must show some life, with a very strong hand for this auction. The problem is that I am not sure what 4N
would signify (hesitation or RKC for hearts).
Something I like about 5D that no one mentioned is that we can cue-bid it even if we don't know exactly what partner intended his 4S bid to mean. For some of our other possible bids we do have to know.
BAKER: 4NT. Assuming partner's cuebidding the ace looking for slam. I'm hoping to hear 6C (1or 3 keys + club void), which makes 6H a likely winner.
BRIDGE BARON: Pass. Bridge Baron thinks partner should have six or more spades for the 4S bid, and even though partner is showing a strong hand, Bridge Baron doesn't think it's worth exploring slam.
WALKER: 6H. Partner has a giant with more spades than hearts, and I have at least 2 big cards plus a 4th trump. I could bid 5D
as a try, but that seems pointless, as partner will bid 5H or 5S and I'll still raise to 6H.
| Action | Score | Votes | % Solvers |
| DBL | 100 | 10 | 33 |
| 3H | 90 | 7 | 21 |
| 4C | 70 | 0 | 1 |
| 5C | 60 | 0 | 2 |
| XX | 00 | 0 | 1 |
3. Matchpoints, Neither Vulnerable
| West | North | East | South |
| -- | -- | Pass | 1![]() |
| Pass | 1![]() |
2![]() |
? * |
| * DBL = 3-cd support | |||
As South you hold:
AQ5
Void
AQ
AQ987652
What's your bid?
There was some famous bridge player who said never put an 8-cd suit down in the dummy. Yeah. ok, but what if your 8-cd suit is clubs, and it's matchpoints, and your other suit is spades, and we have a nice, convenient support double available. The panel was divided between DBL to show 3-cd spade support and 3H which probably denies it.
BAKER: DBL. I have three-card support, so I'm going to show it.
SPEAR: DBL. I am happy to be playing support doubles on this hand, so pard will know what to do when I continue with 6C.
KESSLER: DBL.Keeps the auction at a low level to find out more info.
HUDSON: 3H. Let’s establish a game force before rebidding any number of clubs.
WALKER: 3H. No way I'm making a support double and risking a pass. Even if partner bids, a supp dbl is no way to start the
description of an 8-card suit.
FEILER: 3H. I don't want to support spades. A diamond lead against a spade contract could be seriously bad news, i.e. down four instead of two overtricks!
There's that handsome panelist again. No wonder he gets all the girls!
| Action | Score | Votes | % Solvers |
| 3H | 100 | 8 | 18 |
| Pass | 90 | 6 | 12 |
| 3D | 80 | 3 | 21 |
| 3S | 60 | 0 | 6 |
| XX | 00 | 0 | 1 |
4. Matchpoints, Neither Vulnerable
| West | North | East | South |
| -- | Pass | Pass | 1![]() |
3![]() |
DBL | Pass | ? |
As South you hold:
AQ762
A65
K108
82
What's your bid?
Partner made a takeout double, so we'll take it out into er...what? The bid I admire but wouldn't necessarily make is:
BABIN: Pass. I don't really have a good rebid but probably have
enough to set them with my good defensive hand.
WALKER: Pass. Bad offense (no fit) + good defense (3
quick tricks and a partner who's shown
some strength) = Plus 200 or 500.
MATHENY: Pass. So tempting but could easily be wrong.
STRITE: Pass.Under the assumption we have no greater than an 8 card fit, if that, I'll trust the Law and roll the dice at MPs for
+200 rather than guess our strain.
Most of the panelists that dutifully took out the takeout double bid 3H. No one sounded excited about it.
KESSLER: 3H.This the best we can do, at least we will be ruffing in the short hand.
SPEAR: 3H. OK, I talked myself into bidding 3H at matchpoints, because my pard always has 4 or more hearts and 2 or fewer
spades. At IMPs I would bid 3S in case pard was going to bid 3N if I didn't bid hearts.
Huh??
FEILER: 3H. I may as well bid the suit that scores the highest if I happen to make it.
What a genius this panelist is, how did he think of that!
MERRITT: 3D, Would surely rather be missing a minor suit card than a major suit card.
Huh??
| Action | Score | Votes | % Solvers |
| 5D | 100 | 9 | 18 |
| 6D | 80 | 2 | 4 |
| 4S | 70 | 2 | 11 |
| 4H | 70 | 2 | 3 |
| 4NT | 60 | 2 | 5 |
| 5NT | 50 | 0 | 1 |
| 4D | 40 | 0 | 13 |
| 6H | 40 | 0 | 2 |
| XX | 00 | 0 | 1 |
5. Matchpoints, North-South Vulnerable
| West | North | East | South |
| -- | -- | 2![]() |
DBL |
3![]() |
DBL* | Pass | ? |
| * Responsive | |||
As South you hold:
7
QJ52
AK10743
AQ
What's your bid?
So partner has the red suits? Our hand was good on the last round of bidding and on this round it seems to have turned into a giant mooseburger. Still, most panelists weren't thinking about slam, just about deciding between hearts and diamonds.
KESSLER: 5D. If partner had 4 hearts and enough to double, he would have bid 4H. I think partner has three hearts.
WALSH: 5D. With hearts, partner would just bid them, so his hand should be mostly minors.
HUDSON: 5D. I don’t want to punish partner for stretching to double.
MERRITT: 6D. The fast approach often gets a little vig from pushing opps to take the save.
Is "vig" short for "vigorish" which I think means the bookies part of a bet. The panel is getting pretty esoteric.
SPEAR: 4S. Pard's double denies 4H, so we have a big diamond fit.
VONGSVIVUT: 4S. Forcing, and will rebid 5D after the expected bid 5C by North. Trying to show a hand stronger than direct jump to 5D.
| Action | Score | Votes | % Solvers |
| 4S | 100 | 11 | 19 |
| Pass | 80 | 5 | 30 |
| 5NT | 60 | 0 | 1 |
| 4NT | 60 | 0 | 2 |
| 5H | 60 | 0 | 2 |
| 5D | 50 | 1 | 3 |
| XX | 00 | 0 | 1 |
6. Matchpoints, East-West Vulnerable
| West | North | East | South |
| -- | 1![]() |
Pass | 1NT* |
| Pass | 3![]() |
Pass | 4![]() |
| Pass | 4![]() |
Pass | ? |
As South you hold:
K107
Q6
A7652
865
What's your bid?
This one's a lot like problem 2, where are we going and how do we get there? And like problem 2, we can wheel out the old King cue bid.
MAYNE: 4S. Passing 4H is reasonable, but I have to show this near-max. I'll pass a 5-red bid by pard.
MATHENY: 4S. Partner may be 6-3 in the red suits. The fifth diamond makes this worth one more try.
STRITE: 4S. I Feel like I'm worth another bid, and the KS may be the card that makes this hand.
...or we can go a bit conservative.
WALSH: Pass. Partner must have six hearts to bid this way.
KESSLER: Pass. If partner needs a spade card we should bid, if he needs help in clubs we should pass.
| How the Panel voted | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | Score |
| Larry Matheny, Loveland, Co. | Pass | 5D | DBL | Pass | 5D | 4S | 590 |
| Mark Kessler, Springfield, Illinois USA | Pass | 5D | DBL | 3H | 5D | Pass | 580 |
| James Hudson, Elmhurst, IL, USA | Pass | 5D | 3H | 3D | 5D | 4S | 570 |
| Bob Bernhard, New Smyrna Beach | DBL | 5D | DBL | 3H | 5D | Pass | 560 |
| georgia heth, morton | 3N | 5D | DBL | Pass | 5D | 4S | 560 |
| Jack Spear, Kansas City | DBL | 5D | DBL | 3H | 4S | 4S | 550 |
| Bill Walsh, Champaign | DBL | 6H | DBL | 3H | 5D | Pass | 540 |
| Arbha Vongsvivut, Godfrey, Il 62035 | DBL | 5D | 3H | 3H | 4S | 4S | 540 |
| Toby Strite, San Jose, CA | Pass | Pass | DBL | Pass | 4H | 4S | 530 |
| Jim Munday, Camarillo, CA US | DBL | Pass | 3H | Pass | 5D | 4S | 530 |
| Bridge Baron, Potomac, MD, USA | Pass | Pass | DBL | 3D | 4N | Pass | 490 |
| Steve Babin, normal, Illinois | 3N | 5H | DBL | Pass | 4H | Pass | 460 |
| Dan Baker, Urbana, IL | 3N | 4N | DBL | 3H | 4N | 5D | 440 |
| How the Staff voted | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | Score |
| Kent Feiler, Harvard, IL | Pass | 5D | 3H | 3H | 6D | 4S | 570 |
| Karen Walker, Champaign IL | Pass | 6H | 3H | Pass | 5D | 4S | 560 |
| Scott Merritt, Gaborone | 3N | 5D | 3H | 3D | 6D | 4S | 520 |