Best meaning for 1H -3NT and 1S - 3NT in a 2/1 GF context with 5 card majors
#1
Posted 2012-April-17, 23:02
Currently in my regular partnerships we are playing it as exactly 3 card support in a balanced hand (4 spades is OK) with 13-15 points. This takes pressure off our 1M-2C sequences which include all balanced hands as well as unbalanced hands with clubs so 1M-2D/H are 5+.
Are there good alternative uses for the bid?
#2
Posted 2012-April-17, 23:38
Cthulhu D, on 2012-April-17, 23:02, said:
Currently in my regular partnerships we are playing it as exactly 3 card support in a balanced hand (4 spades is OK) with 13-15 points. This takes pressure off our 1M-2C sequences which include all balanced hands as well as unbalanced hands with clubs so 1M-2D/H are 5+.
Are there good alternative uses for the bid?
I think your present use is poor because you deprive opener from showing his shape/shortness and consequently you can't assess how your high cards are working. I mean, if partner knew that you couldn't have a hand that could be improved by shortness (say 1H-3N with KJx xxx Kxx AKxx) it might be ok.
We use 1M-3N to show a splinter with shortness in the other major, but we play a strong club and want 1S-4H to be to play. I think 3N should be a specialized fit bid of some kind.
#3
Posted 2012-April-17, 23:52
straube, on 2012-April-17, 23:38, said:
We use 1M-3N to show a splinter with shortness in the other major, but we play a strong club and want 1S-4H to be to play. I think 3N should be a specialized fit bid of some kind.
It implicitly denies a 5 card suit, so it has to be 4-4-3-2 shape or 4-3-3-3, so it's effectively choice of games.
What you're saying makes sense though, maybe just pull 13-15 balanced in 2C.
#4
Posted 2012-April-18, 00:02
Cthulhu D, on 2012-April-17, 23:52, said:
What you're saying makes sense though, maybe just pull 13-15 balanced in 2C.
Yeah, say opener has Axx AKQxx Qxxx x. You'll have a nice slam opposite KQx xxx AKJ Qxxx but not opposite Qxx xxx AKJ KQxx. As a rule, balanced hands should not consume a lot of bidding space (e.g. 1C-3N is terrible, really)and it's best if they let an unbalanced hand describe. It's called the Balanced Hand Principle.
#5
Posted 2012-April-18, 00:18
straube, on 2012-April-18, 00:02, said:
OK that all makes sense. With that said, what should be in 3NT then.
#6
Posted 2012-April-18, 00:48
Another approach is you can just play
2N=13-15/19+ bal.
3N=16-18 bal.
both could and often include 3-cards support, this has the advantage that your 2/1, even in minor, shows a real 5+ suit.
For more detail read "Improving 2/1 GF" by Fred Gitelman
You can find the article by open old version BBO->Other Bridge Activity->Bridge Library->English->Articles->Improving 2/1 GF part 1~3
I think your present method is fine either and you already know the advantage.
#7
Posted 2012-April-18, 03:05
-- Bertrand Russell
#8
Posted 2012-April-18, 03:16
#9
Posted 2012-April-18, 03:59
If you would like to make your system a little more complicated then Phil's suggestion is good (if you don't have another way to show a void). A similar approach would be to use it to split the strength of your splinter bids: A direct splinter is either minimum (~11-13) or maximum (~17-19) and 1♥-3♠ and 1♠-3NT show an intermediate (~14-16) or super (~20+) hand. (1♥-3NT will take the meaning of the MIN/MAX spade splinter.)
Rik
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#11
Posted 2012-April-18, 05:24
A simple but effective treatment is:
* 1♠ - 4♠ = 5-card support, no defensive trick (♠Qxxxx ♥x ♦xxxx ♣Jxx)
* 1♠ - 3NT = 5-card support, one defensive trick (♠Qxxxx ♥x ♦Axxx ♣Jxx)
#12
#13
Posted 2012-April-18, 09:37
phil_20686, on 2012-April-18, 03:16, said:
Yes, I really like incorporating this bid into your splinter system somehow. At the moment in my pship 1♥-3NT is a ♠ void splinter and 1♠- 3NT is an unspecified singleton splinter.
EDIT: Apologies, perhaps not suitable for N/B. Didn't notice.
#15
Posted 2012-April-18, 14:45
I would suggest 3NT as showing 13-15 HCP(or could even more narrowly defined as 14-15) 4 trump and 4333 distribution. This type of hand has is hard to show without overbidding, as has no ruffing potential. Opener may be able to picture a dummy reversal, a hand that can make 3NT on power or a hand where 6M or 6NT is playable.
I also like some other suggestions, 13-15 3343 or 3343, 16-18 balanced and as a splinter in other major
#16
Posted 2012-April-18, 15:14
1) I hate any use for 3N that includes a good balanced hand - trump support or not. If you must play it, at least make it so it cannot include four of the other major.
2) I played void splinters for a number of years. They rarely came up.
3) I currently play 1♥ - 3♠ and 1♠ - 3N as 'hidden splinters'. I haven't seen any big gains from this method, but I haven't seen where I'd want to use it for anything else either.
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#17
Posted 2012-April-18, 21:21
Partner usually picks the right game or is wary of 3rd round losers with slam ambitions or can get bullish with a shapely 2nd source of tricks in a 5-5 or better hand.
The 3nt choice of games with a 5-3 major fit is a huge gain on occasion and on normal hands we always pick the right contract unless one (or both) of us has been drinking.
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