Partner opens 1NT you hold 4 - 6 hand. 6 in minor
#1
Posted 2011-November-23, 11:18
3 part question
#1 0-7+ I guess a case could be made for Pass or transfer to minor depending where pts are.
#2 8-14 pts I guess that you should stayman and then bid 3NT if no major fit is found.
#3 15+ pts Transfer to minor then bid your Major? or Stayman and bid your minor?
I always thought that if I transfered to minor then bid I would be showing
splinter and looking for slam.
Question:
1NT - 2♠ [trans ♣]
2NT [Super acceptance] 3♥
Is this best as a splinter for ♣ or showing a 4-6 hand. 4 Hearts and 6 Clubs
Comments on all
#2
Posted 2011-November-23, 12:45
There is no expert consensus on whether to show suits or shortage after a minor-suit transfer. Both have their advantages and adherents. I think the case for it showing a second suit is probably lower after a super-accept though.
#3
Posted 2011-November-23, 12:57
without any special agreements, I would assume that Stayman followed by
bidding 3 of a minor, showes gf values and a 54 shape, which comes close
to gf values and a 64 shape.
So I would say, that depending on your decision, you should follow this route,
in case of #2 and #3.
Regarding your final question - shortage should come up more often in this
kind of sequence, so from a frequency point of view playing 3H as shortage
is most likely better, ... and if you are interested in finding a 4-4 in the
major, why did you not start with Stayman?
With kind regards
Marlowe
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#4
Posted 2011-November-23, 14:07
#5
Posted 2011-November-23, 15:32
2. When you have a GF, the customary way to bid the hand is to Stayman, and then bid your side suit if partner doesn't hit your major. Nominally this shows 4-5, but it will help you avoid a bad 3N, when partner has weakness in the 4th suit.
3. With a very good hand, I would still bid the hand the same way, but I would go past 3N.
By the way, the standard way to play 3M after a minor suit transfer is that it shows shortness. You can play it as a 2nd suit, sure. I know of one pair that plays 3M to show four of the other major, which helps right-side the contract. They also play 1N - 2♣ - 2M - 3m as invitational, since this isn't needed as GF.
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#6
Posted 2011-November-23, 15:54
#7
Posted 2011-November-23, 16:03
transfer to clubs then 3♦ has no standard I think.
#8
Posted 2011-November-23, 17:40
Fluffy, on 2011-November-23, 16:03, said:
transfer to clubs then 3♦ has no standard I think.
I started to type and deleted that 1N - 2♠ - 2N/3♣ - 3♦ could be a transfer to hearts, 3♥ = spades, and 3♠ = unknown shortness. Or some scheme like this.
I couldn't make 1N - 2N work however .
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#9
Posted 2011-November-24, 02:39
Phil, on 2011-November-23, 17:40, said:
I couldn't make 1N - 2N work however .
After 1N - 2S; 2NT/3C, I play: 3D = clubs with hearts, 3H = clubs with spades, 3S = 5-5 minors in a (Puppet) scheme that does not have 2C followed by showing clubs available for these hands. One-suited hands with clubs and slam interest simply start 1NT - 3C. It would be possible to add a shortage ask after this if desired although I have not bothered with it.
Reading between the lines of this thread, it seems to me that the standard US style seems to be that a minor-suit transfer is only made on a 1-suiter. I find this quite interesting as one of the strengths of transfers is usually that they handle 2-suited hands so efficiently. One quite reasonable option might be to play my structure above (transfer with 2 suits, bid the minor with a 1-suiter) and to play Stayman followed by a minor as invitational. I have no idea how this would play in practise but it is certainly true that if you are willing to give up on the shortage-showing rebids (or to live with 1NT - 3m; 3m+1 as a shortage ask) you have a ton more bidding space for other hand types.
#10
Posted 2011-November-24, 03:09
George Carlin
#11
Posted 2011-November-24, 14:29
Phil, on 2011-November-23, 15:32, said:
xxx=xxxx=xxxxx=x
..or maybe even??: xx=xxxx=xxxxx=xx
Stayman and pass partners bid?
#12
Posted 2011-November-24, 15:30
Simple analogy:
If I say "all trains have wheels." and you wanted to prove I was wrong, you shouldn't say "but my unicycle also has a wheel!" You should say "Maglev has no wheels!".
George Carlin
#13
Posted 2011-November-25, 04:55
dickiegera, on 2011-November-23, 11:18, said:
3 part question
#1 0-7+ I guess a case could be made for Pass or transfer to minor depending where pts are.
#2 8-14 pts I guess that you should stayman and then bid 3NT if no major fit is found.
#3 15+ pts Transfer to minor then bid your Major? or Stayman and bid your minor?
I always thought that if I transfered to minor then bid I would be showing
splinter and looking for slam.
Question:
1NT - 2♠ [trans ♣]
2NT [Super acceptance] 3♥
Is this best as a splinter for ♣ or showing a 4-6 hand. 4 Hearts and 6 Clubs
Comments on all
The canonical way to bid a 4M-5+m is Stayman + follow up with
- 2NT if in the invitational zone or
- 3m if in the GF zone. You can skip showing the minor if you're 5422 with no slam interest, in which case you can bid 3NT.
As to your questions:
#1: usually you transfer, yes.
#2: not always. See above.
#3: transfer to minor and bid a major usually shows a stopper and singleton in the other major. You can play it as splinter too.
#14
Posted 2011-November-25, 08:41
gwnn, on 2011-November-24, 15:30, said:
Simple analogy:
If I say "all trains have wheels." and you wanted to prove I was wrong, you shouldn't say "but my unicycle also has a wheel!" You should say "Maglev has no wheels!".
You are right. I didn't realise that my hands didn't contain a 6-card
Then: xx=xxxx=xxxxxx=x
maybe (probably not) it is better to start with 2♣ and pass the response.
(Some time ago there was a reference on the forums to a site with an analysis when 2♣ is better then pass/transfer and it did have some surprising results for weak stayman. I wonder if this could be one of them)
#15
Posted 2011-November-25, 09:21
- 6♦ and 4-3M (planning to pass the response)
- 6♦, 4♥, less than 3♠ (planning to pass 2♦/2♥ response / planning to rebid 3♣ as a puppet to 3♦ if partner bids 2♠ - but this is not standard)
Otherwise, always transfer the minor. I think the chance is small you'll find a fit anyway, especially when opps don't intervene (if we have a fit M, then it's highly likely one of our opponents has a 6 card OM).
#16
Posted 2011-November-25, 12:23
Vampyr, on 2011-November-23, 14:07, said:
I assume you superaccept with step 2, (Qxx or better?). Could you give chapter and verse on why this is better than superaccept with step 1?
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Soon: Mission illegal
#17
Posted 2011-November-27, 16:31
Wackojack, on 2011-November-25, 12:23, said:
I realise your question was rhetorical but, for those that like to bundle extra stuff into their minor-suit transfers, you can include a weak hand and both minors into 1NT - 2NT (along with your diamond transfer)and use 1NT - 2S as your 2NT invite as well as the club transfer. The disadvntage of this method is that in the first case the 3D call stops being a pure super-accept but rather fit-showing, and in the second case the 3C bid simply shows a maximum rather than a super-accept. In terms of pure super-accepts, without this bundling, I do not know of any theoretical advantage of playing 3m as the super-accept rather than the other way around.
#18
Posted 2011-November-27, 16:42
Cuebidding on the 3lvl is pretty good in case you still want to play 3NT if partner is missing a cuebid.