Print

ask your partner to bid!

You can share the East hand and give your partner access to this exclusive BRIDGERAMA+ article, even if he/she is not a subscriber.

ask your partner to bid!

You can share the West hand and give your partner access to this exclusive BRIDGERAMA+ article, even if he/she is not a subscriber.

SIGN IN

using your Le Bridgeur account

Having trouble connecting?

Consult our help section

73 - MAY 2026

Read more issues
Hide
Add to bookmarks
Remove from bookmarks
Print

Responding to an opening bid after a takeout double

North-South have reached a very poor contract. As so often, each of the two players considers that his partner is responsible for the accident. And you, what do you think?

This month, we will be looking at:
Responding to an opening bid after a takeout double.

Easy
Average
Difficult

Introduction
We follow the adventures and misadventures of two young players as they put their newly acquired skills into practice in regular Club tournaments. Sandy, sitting South, has a solid grasp of bidding techniques after a takeout double. Louis, sitting North, finds it more challenging and he faces much trickier decisions.

Problem 1

E/W Vul.

WNES
1♠DbleRdbl
22Pass3NT

The facts
Not a great result. 3 No-Trump goes down, and North–South miss the chance to collect a hefty penalty against 2 Diamonds doubled.

Arguments
North: “I was worried we might miss a Heart fit if I passed, or that you weren’t strong enough to protect over 2. I have two Diamonds and didn’t consider the possibility of a penalty double.”

South: “We’ve learned that the redouble is autoforcing, expecting partner to pass. I understand your 2 bid, and I was probably wrong to push to 3NT ‒ we can easily make 4 Spades. In reality, I intended to double 2 for penalties. I think you should pass over 2 to find out more.”

This article is reserved for BRIDGERAMA+ subscribers.

Share this post
Avatar photo
Alain Lévy

A renowned bridge author and player, he was born in Casablanca on 14th July 1949. He has earned three World Champion titles as a member of the French Open team and has also won countless national titles. He writes articles about leading in bridge for Bridgerama+, as well as Figaro Magazine. He mainly provides analysis of his own games on the blog. Picture © Caroline Moreau.

Articles: 108

Leave a Reply

MAG

Contents