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How do you handle this Choices first and later to come

#21 User is offline   nekthen 

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Posted 2018-September-24, 04:23

One of those hands where you are happiest playing some sort of almost GF bid. Like 2C where 2D is the GF or the dreaded multi 2D. This looks like 1C 1 any 2N given the system declared.
What is partner supposed to do after 2N 3c 3N?
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#22 User is offline   maartenxq 

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Posted 2018-September-24, 04:24

View PostCyberyeti, on 2018-September-23, 13:23, said:

Partner's hand was A10xx, Qxxx, xx, Kxx, even upgrading to 22-23 we didn't bid slam, but gained an IMP by making 13. I'm glad most people did what I did, it's not clear we bid a slam after a 1 opener either.

I did not read this before answering.
Maarten Baltussen
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#23 User is offline   Cyberyeti 

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Posted 2018-September-24, 04:34

View Postmsjennifer, on 2018-September-24, 03:43, said:

Sir,as an exercise we dealt the remaining 39 cards many a times and found that partner almost always had 5+ HCP and the only occasion he did not have them the opponents always came in as it was easy to do so at 1 level.IN short.we never missed any thing.According to the options provided this 21 HCP hands sits only in 1c opening which does indicate a 4+ club suit.Any other bid will mean upgrading the hand or misrepresenting it as a balanced one which I personally feel is not. When playing PRECISION we do not have problem as the 1C opening is forcing for 1 round .


How do you actually bid this in old style precision ? same sort of problem, 1-1N- do you show it as balanced or show your clubs ? You've also wrongsided 6N.
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#24 User is offline   P_Marlowe 

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Posted 2018-September-24, 04:50

View PostCyberyeti, on 2018-September-24, 04:34, said:

How do you actually bid this in old style precision ? same sort of problem, 1-1N- do you show it as balanced or show your clubs ? You've also wrongsided 6N.

I dont know old style precision, (*) but my guess is, that 1C - 1NT denies 4 card majors.
On average partner will have diamond values, i.e. Kx in diamond, faces an empty dimaond length?
The strong hand hits the table? Happens.
Regarding as what to sell the hand: I would use the lowest bid to sell my hand.
My guess: this would be bal, perfectly fine.
In your original frame work, it would be gf with clubs, also pretty fine.

You can upgrade the hand to a 2NT / 2C opener, will work some of the time, and wont work the rest
of it. And thats it.
It will be hard to bid slam, facing a 6-10 bal. hand, when I sell my hand as bal. 20-23, because
partner wont have an idea, that the king of clubs produces 6 tricks.
Similar it will be hard to get him excited, if I limit my hand to 20/21, even when I am showing a
source of tricks, and this is even more so, when I regular sell my 18/19 HCP hands as 20/21 hands,
i.e. when my shown strength includes the length adjustments, dont get me wrong: upgrading is completly
fine, but partner will take my upgrading strategy into consideration, and act accordingly.

(*) I am, stupid enough to ignore the question, why it should be relevant, how to bid this hand in a
different system.
With kind regards
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
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#25 User is offline   Cyberyeti 

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Posted 2018-September-24, 05:36

View PostP_Marlowe, on 2018-September-24, 04:50, said:

I dont know old style precision, (*) but my guess is, that 1C - 1NT denies 4 card majors.
On average partner will have diamond values, i.e. Kx in diamond, faces an empty dimaond length?
The strong hand hits the table? Happens.
Regarding as what to sell the hand: I would use the lowest bid to sell my hand.
My guess: this would be bal, perfectly fine.
In your original frame work, it would be gf with clubs, also pretty fine.

You can upgrade the hand to a 2NT / 2C opener, will work some of the time, and wont work the rest
of it. And thats it.
It will be hard to bid slam, facing a 6-10 bal. hand, when I sell my hand as bal. 20-23, because
partner wont have an idea, that the king of clubs produces 6 tricks.
Similar it will be hard to get him excited, if I limit my hand to 20/21, even when I am showing a
source of tricks, and this is even more so, when I regular sell my 18/19 HCP hands as 20/21 hands,
i.e. when my shown strength includes the length adjustments, dont get me wrong: upgrading is completly
fine, but partner will take my upgrading strategy into consideration, and act accordingly.

(*) I am, stupid enough to ignore the question, why it should be relevant, how to bid this hand in a
different system.


I just posed the question because I also play old style precision and I don't think it's easy there unlike what was suggested.

1-1N denies 5M but not 4M and 2 is staymanic over this not showing clubs. We play it split range 8-10 or 13+.

I was never clear what the difference was between 1-1N-3 and 1-1N-2-2any-3, but you have the same choice to make of bidding your clubs or just quantitively raising to 4N.
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#26 User is offline   rhm 

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Posted 2018-September-24, 06:14

View PostCyberyeti, on 2018-September-23, 07:08, said:



1 4+clubs 11-22, you do have a GF unbalanced 2N rebid available over a 1 of a suit response

If you have this option I really do not understand why you do not want to use it.
Looks like a perfect description of the hand to me.
I am not worried getting passed out.
In most cases I need at least one entry to dummy plus a club finesse to succeed in 3NT.

I am not claiming that 2 then 2N balanced 22-23 does not show equivalent strength, but it does not hint at the club length.

If you miss a club slam serves you right in my opinion.

Rainer Herrmann
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#27 User is offline   rhm 

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Posted 2018-September-24, 06:30

View PostCyberyeti, on 2018-September-24, 04:34, said:

How do you actually bid this in old style precision ? same sort of problem, 1-1N- do you show it as balanced or show your clubs ? You've also wrongsided 6N.

Wrong-siding happens but tends to be over-judged.
Of course you show your clubs vigorously. (3 followed by 4 or 4NT seems appropriate).
If you bid straight away 4NT over 1-1N an expert might credit you with such a hand since you did not open 2
I would never stop below 4NT if partner responds 1N , whether playing precision or ACOL

Rainer Herrmann
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#28 User is offline   JanisW 

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Posted 2018-September-24, 09:39

View PostCyberyeti, on 2018-September-23, 13:23, said:

Partner's hand was A10xx, Qxxx, xx, Kxx, even upgrading to 22-23 we didn't bid slam, but gained an IMP by making 13. I'm glad most people did what I did, it's not clear we bid a slam after a 1 opener either.


How was the bidding?
2 - 2
2NT - 3
3 - 3NT?
If so, I think your partner was a little cautious with a decent 9 count.

I hope I'd be able to bid like that with my fave Partner
2-2
2NT - 3
3 - 4NT (quantitative)
6 - P obvious with 3 to the K

regards
JW
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#29 User is offline   msjennifer 

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Posted 2018-September-24, 13:11

View PostCyberyeti, on 2018-September-24, 04:34, said:

How do you actually bid this in old style precision ? same sort of problem, 1-1N- do you show it as balanced or show your clubs ? You've also wrongsided 6N.

Sir,we DO NOT PLAY OLD PRECISION just as we do not play Gorens Standard system.Playing Super Precision we will arrive in 6 Clubs very easily .Yes,I know we will get a bottom when playing at MP. and lose a paltry 2/3 IMP.when playing an IMP event.Sir,as regards your second question ,we show clubs and it is a support asking bid.The responders bid will show Kxx support .Controls ask will be answered showing 3 controls and since we have to give up a trick to the missing Ace we will prefer to bid 6C.( and Sir,pardon me but does not one bid a 50% slam?).
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#30 User is offline   mikeh 

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Posted 2018-September-24, 14:13

I'm late to the thread but to me there is no choice other than 2C then 2N.

Neither the suit nor the hand are good enough or suit oriented enough to bid 2C then 3C

Btw, to the poster who suggested 2C then 3C, and had responder bid 3S on A10xx, that is not a good idea. 3S should show 5+ length. The solution to finding a 4-4 major suit fit after this start is to use 3D by responder as a 'noise'. Give up on finding a high-level diamond fit (unless your hand is so good that you can rebid diamonds later) and use 3D as artificial. It isn't 'stayman', in that it doesn't promise a major. Sometimes all you are trying to do it to position 3N so that the strong hand is on play, especially since you don't rate to have all the side suits stopped in your hand :P

So on the actual hand, I'd rebid 2N, have partner stayman and then, over my 3N, I think that responder is (just) good enough to bid 4N. It isn't just hcp. It's the quality of the hcp, and in particular the fact that my 9 count includes 3 controls. In my experience, when one hand is known to be very strong, one can push a little for slam because having 3 controls and a Queen will tend to fill in the gaps in a hand that doesn't have many gaps to start with. 9 opposite 23 is usually better than say 15 opposite 17.

In this case, opener has an easy 6C call over 4N. While some will argue that we have already upgraded to open 2C, that argument misses the boat entirely. This isn't just a very good 21 count....once partner invites a slam in notrump, this becomes a wonderful trick taking hand. About the worst we're going to face is xx in clubs, with side entries.

Now, in fairness, I'd prefer to have stated my plan before I saw the hands/result, but what I have outlined is consistent with my approach to bidding big hands.

I always laugh when I see 2N sequences described as slam killers. I don't think any good partnership sees it that way, but one needs good methods and good evaluation skills.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari
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#31 User is offline   miamijd 

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Posted 2018-September-24, 14:32

I would also start with 2C and rebid 2NT. 2NT openers are indeed slam-killers. 2C openers at not. At pairs, your primary goal is to get to a decent spot and then max out your tricks. You don't want to swing boards in the bidding unless you're pretty sure you're right. Here are the things that can go wrong:

1. You open 1C; it gets passed out; and 1C is the wrong spot (you can make a game somewhere).
2. You open 2C; you get to 3NT; and it goes set as partner has 3-4 count and short clubs. 1C would have made a plus score.
3. You open 2C and get to 3NT, but you could have reached a making 6C if you'd opened 1C.

I think 1 is very likely; 2 is more likely than you think (but probably less likely than 1); and 3 is not even worth considering.

Even after 2C-2D-2NT, there is still a shot at slam. With the 9-count your partner had, he will make some sort of major-suit inquiry (one version of Stayman or another), and when you deny a four-card major, I think it's close whether your partner should bid 3NT or 4NT. If he bids 4NT, you have an easy 6C call. If partner has 10+, you are getting to slam.

If partner has 7-8 with shape and 4 clubs, you will languish in 3NT when 6C might make, but do you really think you are going to get to 6C if you open 1C? Doubtful. If you are dead-set on finding these slams, then play a good strong club system like Meckwell Precision. Your part-score bidding will suffer a bit, but you will hit all your slams.

You are NOT strong enough to bid 2C followed by 3C. That ought to show 9.5 tricks (at least the way we play here in the USA), and that's going to result in playing way too many bad slams.

Incidentally, you stated that playing 2H double negative can "screw you up" if partner has a positive hand with hearts. Not necessarily. Probably the best way to play is that 2S is positive in hearts and 2NT is positive in spades. Works fairly well.

Cheers,
Mike
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#32 User is offline   mikeh 

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Posted 2018-September-24, 15:03

View Postmiamijd, on 2018-September-24, 14:32, said:

I would also start with 2C and rebid 2NT. 2NT openers are indeed slam-killers. 2C openers at not. At pairs, your primary goal is to get to a decent spot and then max out your tricks. You don't want to swing boards in the bidding unless you're pretty sure you're right. Here are the things that can go wrong:

1. You open 1C; it gets passed out; and 1C is the wrong spot (you can make a game somewhere).
2. You open 2C; you get to 3NT; and it goes set as partner has 3-4 count and short clubs. 1C would have made a plus score.
3. You open 2C and get to 3NT, but you could have reached a making 6C if you'd opened 1C.

I think 1 is very likely; 2 is more likely than you think (but probably less likely than 1); and 3 is not even worth considering.

Even after 2C-2D-2NT, there is still a shot at slam. With the 9-count your partner had, he will make some sort of major-suit inquiry (one version of Stayman or another), and when you deny a four-card major, I think it's close whether your partner should bid 3NT or 4NT. If he bids 4NT, If partner has 10+, you are getting to slam.

If partner has 7-8 with shape and 4 clubs, you will languish in 3NT when 6C might make, but do you really think you are going to get to 6C if you open 1C? Doubtful. If you are dead-set on finding these slams, then play a good strong club system like Meckwell Precision. Your part-score bidding will suffer a bit, but you will hit all your slams.

You are NOT strong enough to bid 2C followed by 3C. That ought to show 9.5 tricks (at least the way we play here in the USA), and that's going to result in playing way too many bad slams.

Incidentally, you stated that playing 2H double negative can "screw you up" if partner has a positive hand with hearts. Not necessarily. Probably the best way to play is that 2S is positive in hearts and 2NT is positive in spades. Works fairly well.



that idea of how to handle the majors isn't bad, but my preference is to use 2N as either major, and opener bids 3C either with clubs or, and this is by far the more common, with interest in finding your major. Responder transfers into the major, and opener accepts to set trump, and otherwise makes an intelligent bid.

Btw, this frees up 2S for other uses, and (following a suggestion by Fred G) we use as balanced or semi-balanced (the only permissible 5 card suit is an indifferent minor) with 8-11 hcp. In fact, on the OP hand, we'd bid 2S...now opener can afford to bid 3C if he chooses, and it makes sense to do so once partner is known to have at least xx and usually 3+ support, and 8-11 hcp. Responder would raise clubs and now it's relatively trivial to reach 6C or 6N.
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#33 User is offline   Cyberyeti 

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Posted 2018-September-24, 15:11

View Postmiamijd, on 2018-September-24, 14:32, said:


Incidentally, you stated that playing 2H double negative can "screw you up" if partner has a positive hand with hearts. Not necessarily. Probably the best way to play is that 2S is positive in hearts and 2NT is positive in spades. Works fairly well.

Cheers,
Mike


Sorry I meant where you were intending to bid 2-2-2 (particularly with 5 and a minor)
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#34 User is offline   jm02130 

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Posted 2018-September-24, 15:28

At IMPs or rubber bridge I open 2c and respond 3c to 3d. At matchpoints I respond 2nt. I go slamming over any positive response at any form of scoring.
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#35 User is offline   Left2Right 

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Posted 2018-September-24, 17:44

This is an age old problem. Let's take it one piece at a time.

a) You hold an a "semi-balanced" hand as Max Hardy put it, not a balanced hand. Although popular in some circles, a non-standard NT call here or on the rebid reflects a clear lack of patience, both in partner and oneself.
b) You hold 7 controls(1), under-representing the equivalent balanced two club opener, even if it's just by half a trick.
c) The rule we should keep in mind is that "minor suits DO NOT become second class citizens until one partner or the other can cogently dismiss the possibility of a minor suit slam." One cannot invoke this rule having heard nothing from partner.

Even after putting all this together, common natural systems make this hand a problem. The sophisticated but rarely used solution: The False Reverse. After patiently opening one natural club, partner responds, say 1NT. Your false reverse into 2 clues partner in to the possiblity of this hand. Any partner worth his salt will support clubs with any three of them or any honor doubleton.

You are on your way. 8-)


(1) https://www.bridgeha...ed_Controls.htm
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#36 User is offline   mikeh 

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Posted 2018-September-24, 17:52

View PostLeft2Right, on 2018-September-24, 17:30, said:

This is an age old problem. Let's take it one piece at a time.

a) You hold an a "semi-balanced" hand as Max Hardy put it, not a balanced hand. Although popular in some circles, a non-standard NT call here or on the rebid reflects a clear lack of patience, both in partner and oneself.
b) You hold 7 controls<superscript>(1)</superscript>, under-representing the equivalent balanced two club opener, even if it's just by half a trick. (See https://www.bridgeha...ed_Controls.htm )
c) The rule we should keep in mind is that "minor suits <strong>DO NOT</strong> become second class citizens until one partner or the other can cogently dismiss the possibility of a minor suit slam."

Even after putting all this together, common natural systems make this hand a problem. The sophisticated but rarely used solution: The False Reverse. After patiently opening one natural club, partner responds, say 1NT. Your false reverse into 2 clues partner in to the possiblity of this hand. Any partner worth his salt will support club with any three of them or any honor doubleton.

You are on your way. 8-)



(1) https://www.bridgeha...ed_Controls.htm



It's been a while since I saw anyone refer to Max Hardy as an authority. He wrote a couple of versions of a book on 2/1. I owned the first one, and played the method pretty much as he outlined it, but even then I saw that he wasn't a very good writer. In fact, the book was just an explication of methods then in favour amongst experts in, primarily, California and, in fairness, he was pretty open about it, not claiming either originality nor true expert status. He was known primarily as a Tournament Director. AFAIK he never won anything of note.

Neither have I, of course:)

That idea of a fake reverse is awful, even if partner has experience with fake reverses. One can never catch up, unless one is prepared to make an unilateral overbid after partner tries to sign off, and all the while partner has no idea that you hold stoppers in every suit, no singleton, and a hand worth approximately 23 points (for those who like numbers, personally I just see this a 2C opening bid without worrying about numbers).

As for your rule about minors, I do agree that a lot of players, who cut their teeth in club and sectional level mp events, don't properly value the minors, especially for slam. However, one cannot cater to every aspect of a complex hand, and here opening 1C makes life so complex (assuming of course that we do not end up declaring 1C), that it really isn't worth misdescribing both shape and strength in order to show 5+ clubs!

In addition, if one really wants to keep a club slam in the picture, one can do so, while conveying a reasonable (tho in my view second-best) picture by bidding 2C then 3C. Note that in some methods (the one I espouse in an earlier post herein) it is entirely reasonable to rebid 3C, since partner will have shown a balanced 8-11 in response to 2C. Few pairs have that option, so I am not suggesting it as a general approach. I merely point out that there are ways to deal with these hands that do not involve a (frankly) grotesque distortion.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari
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#37 User is offline   miamijd 

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Posted 2018-September-24, 18:23

View Postmikeh, on 2018-September-24, 15:03, said:

that idea of how to handle the majors isn't bad, but my preference is to use 2N as either major, and opener bids 3C either with clubs or, and this is by far the more common, with interest in finding your major. Responder transfers into the major, and opener accepts to set trump, and otherwise makes an intelligent bid.

Btw, this frees up 2S for other uses, and (following a suggestion by Fred G) we use as balanced or semi-balanced (the only permissible 5 card suit is an indifferent minor) with 8-11 hcp. In fact, on the OP hand, we'd bid 2S...now opener can afford to bid 3C if he chooses, and it makes sense to do so once partner is known to have at least xx and usually 3+ support, and 8-11 hcp. Responder would raise clubs and now it's relatively trivial to reach 6C or 6N.


Yes, the method you suggest is superior and one that I like in a serious partnership, but I was just trying to suggest a simple method for those who didn't want to devote a lot of effort on 2C methods.
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#38 User is offline   thawp66 

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Posted 2018-September-24, 18:52

View PostCyberyeti, on 2018-September-24, 03:08, said:

One pair did this sort of thing and played 6 which didn't go well when spades were 5-1

If the auction started 1!C 1!H 2!S ... 6!S South should always convert to 6N
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#39 User is offline   Cyberyeti 

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Posted 2018-September-25, 03:55

View Postthawp66, on 2018-September-24, 18:52, said:

If the auction started 1!C 1!H 2!S ... 6!S South should always convert to 6N


I'm not sure what their exact auction was (it certainly started with 1) but S thought N had 5 spades from the way it developed so didn't pull it.
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#40 User is offline   kanchi 

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Posted 2018-September-25, 04:39

I open 2c and rebid c. Again c in the next round also expecting p to bid 3nt ot pass
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