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Most unwelcome response to a 1 bid

#1 User is offline   kereru67 

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Posted 2022-March-16, 06:57

For me it's 3NT. There's really no excuse for making that bid without making a one round force to find out a bit more info about your partner's hand first. You are not in a position to decide the final contract without a good description of your partner's hand, which could be anything from a flat 12 to a 20+ near game force.
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#2 User is offline   LBengtsson 

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Posted 2022-March-16, 08:56

View Postkereru67, on 2022-March-16, 06:57, said:

For me it's 3NT. There's really no excuse for making that bid without making a one round force to find out a bit more info about your partner's hand first. You are not in a position to decide the final contract without a good description of your partner's hand, which could be anything from a flat 12 to a 20+ near game force.


Most players would use 3NT as some artificial bid over a one level opening here, especially a major suit. But even without that, if the 3NT no-trump bid is a good range (13/14-15) like a one no-trump opener then opener can decide where the best contract lay.

Partner opens 1 and you hold this hand, 3NT could well be the best bid though many might use a off-shape 2 bid to force and end in wrong contact when partner is strong and has support. Bidding the poor suit at the 2 level is not good imo.


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#3 User is offline   mycroft 

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Posted 2022-March-16, 09:02

If it's specific enough, you don't have to "hear about partner's hand", assuming you trust your partner. They have sufficient knowledge of both hands to set the contract, and frequently it's "with the 12-20 random hand hidden".

Now, whether 13-15 balanced, no 4cM (what is commonly played in the ACBL these days) is specific enough for that (knowing you have a quantitative 4NT available, and assuming 1-3NT; 4 both isn't Gerber and can stop in 4NT) I am not sure. Definitely the old-fashioned GF 2NT (13-15 or 18+) with 3NT 16-17 balanced works better for slam hands (but the very common 10+-12 hands are frustrating).

But 1 suit-3NT is not "placing the contract", no matter how it is for many other auctions. It's "describe your hand well enough for a double jump, and let partner place the contract (which, granted, is most of the time, "pass").

Over 1M, it's even more precise, whether you play it flat-with-2, or flat 3M433, or however else.

Frankly, the one I hate is 1-1NT. On a minimum, 2NT could be way too high; on a maximum, the same hand is gin for 3. And if partner has the 20-almost-game-force with say 2=4=6=1, do you blast the MP 3NT, or try for 6, knowing that it's very hard to stop anywhere but 5? Of course it's worse for me in my regular K/S partnership, where either we play the KSU "not interested in game opposite 17 BAL", and deal with the 8-10 somehow, or play "strong NT standard" 8-10/, 6-bad10/ and, well, ick.
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#4 User is offline   Cyberyeti 

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Posted 2022-March-16, 09:26

We play 3N specifically as 4333 13-15 with 3 of partner's suit and no 4 card major, partner usually doesn't have a big problem over it.
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#5 User is offline   pescetom 

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Posted 2022-March-16, 09:43

View Postmycroft, on 2022-March-16, 09:02, said:

If it's specific enough, you don't have to "hear about partner's hand", assuming you trust your partner. They have sufficient knowledge of both hands to set the contract, and frequently it's "with the 12-20 random hand hidden".

Now, whether 13-15 balanced, no 4cM (what is commonly played in the ACBL these days) is specific enough for that (knowing you have a quantitative 4NT available, and assuming 1-3NT; 4 both isn't Gerber and can stop in 4NT) I am not sure. Definitely the old-fashioned GF 2NT (13-15 or 18+) with 3NT 16-17 balanced works better for slam hands (but the very common 10+-12 hands are frustrating).

But 1 suit-3NT is not "placing the contract", no matter how it is for many other auctions. It's "describe your hand well enough for a double jump, and let partner place the contract (which, granted, is most of the time, "pass").

Over 1M, it's even more precise, whether you play it flat-with-2, or flat 3M433, or however else.

Damning with faint praise :)
I like 3NT as some kind of splinter in the other major.

View PostLBengtsson, on 2022-March-16, 08:56, said:

Partner opens 1 and you hold this hand, 3NT could well be the best bid though many might use a off-shape 2 bid to force and end in wrong contact when partner is strong and has support. Bidding the poor suit at the 2 level is not good imo.

Hiding a 5-card major without fit in the other is not good imo.
Partner is almost bound to hold AQT and massacre me in the post-mortem.
Playing 2/1 GF, I see 2 as near-automatic, we have RKCB to check for the top trumps if necessary and if we end up in 3NT with no stop then you're in the same boat anyway.
I do agree that blasting 3NT is better than a semi-artificial 2, not because I'm unhappy that partner can bid 3 but because my next bid is going to give partner a hopelessly distorted vison of my hand.
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#6 User is offline   P_Marlowe 

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Posted 2022-March-16, 11:35

Hi

why?

3NT showing 13-15, without 3 card support / 4 spades.
It will also not be 5332, so this leaves 4432, maybe 4333 in rare cases.

So the bid descripes responders hand pretty tight, and what is wrong with this?

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Marlowe
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#7 User is offline   mikeh 

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Posted 2022-March-16, 12:07

There is no unwelcome response as far as I’m concerned. If you have a coherent bidding system then there should be no response that troubles you.

I do, however, dislike partner passing my 1C opening bid, since I could have hands as I’ll-suited for 1C as a 4=4=3=2 11 count, vulnerable, or a 3=3=5=2 19 count😀

However, we strain to respond to 1C and in real life rarely get a terrible result.

Btw, the notion of responding 3N with any 5 card suit (let alone a major!) ought not to be part of any coherent bidding method. If you design methods in that fashion, I’m sure you’ll have a number of uncomfortable sequences.
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#8 User is offline   pescetom 

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Posted 2022-March-16, 13:57

View PostP_Marlowe, on 2022-March-16, 11:35, said:

why?

3NT showing 13-15, without 3 card support / 4 spades.
It will also not be 5332, so this leaves 4432, maybe 4333 in rare cases.

So the bid descripes responders hand pretty tight, and what is wrong with this?

mycroft already said it, that is playable if well agreed and with 4NT quantitative, 4 and then 4NT natural, u.s.w.
That doesn't make it look like a good agreement to me, in particular it consumes vital bidding space if opener is 5-5 and interested in slam.
In the meantime, you are stuck with poor agreements like 1-4 as a singleton-void splinter, which is imprecise, error prone with some partners and an unnecessary sacrifice of a descriptive natural bid.
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#9 User is offline   Cyberyeti 

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Posted 2022-March-16, 15:06

View Postpescetom, on 2022-March-16, 13:57, said:

In the meantime, you are stuck with poor agreements like 1-4 as a singleton-void splinter, which is imprecise, error prone with some partners and an unnecessary sacrifice of a descriptive natural bid.


No you're not, 4=void, singletons thru the 2N raise for example.
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#10 User is offline   mycroft 

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Posted 2022-March-16, 15:16

Alternatively, of course, in the 85% of hands(*) where partner has 12-16, bad 17 or so, guess what, you're on lead to 1m-3NT; p. Where, at the other tables with more scientific methods, the lead is less blind. Sure, on some of them the killing weakness will be found in the auction, and on some of *them* it will be found vs 1m-3NT, but surely "lead blind" has to be +EV on balance.

I love science as much as the next system freak, but I also know the value, both in energy expenditure and in information transmission, of system-enforced bang-bang mindless auctions, even if they concede some rare magic slams or Moysian only-makes.

(*) 90% of statistics are totally wild-assed-guessed, including this one. But tell me it's not close.
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#11 User is offline   pescetom 

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Posted 2022-March-16, 15:36

View Postmycroft, on 2022-March-16, 15:16, said:

Alternatively, of course, in the 85% of hands(*) where partner has 12-16, bad 17 or so, guess what, you're on lead to 1m-3NT; p. Where, at the other tables with more scientific methods, the lead is less blind. Sure, on some of them the killing weakness will be found in the auction, and on some of *them* it will be found vs 1m-3NT, but surely "lead blind" has to be +EV on balance.

I love science as much as the next system freak, but I also know the value, both in energy expenditure and in information transmission, of system-enforced bang-bang mindless auctions, even if they concede some rare magic slams or Moysian only-makes.


I agree with that, but above we were talking about 1M-3NT which is hardly the same. After a "natural" 1m (or even more 1NT) then bang-bang has a lot going for it especially at MP.
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#12 User is offline   mikeh 

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Posted 2022-March-16, 16:01

View PostCyberyeti, on 2022-March-16, 15:06, said:

No you're not, 4=void, singletons thru the 2N raise for example.

Much better, imo and on my experience, is that 1M 3OM shows an unspecified singleton (or in the case of 1H 3S, possibly also the much less common void spade).

Splinters are usually and imo should be played as limited in range.your range may vary but for me it’s just over a limit raise to just over an opening bid, so roughly 11-13.

Opener usually signs off in game and the opps don’t know what will appear in dummy and can’t usually get in a lead directing or sacrifice suggesting double.

Opener can ask if he has interest: cheapest bid asks and responses are LMH.

That leaves 1M 4m as void showing.

How you play 1S 4H is optional but must (obviously) be discussed. If it’s natural (as I play it….long, good texture hearts, less than opening values) then 1s3H includes a void heart, but now one can show it over 3S….3N is stiff club, etc, and 4H is heart void.
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#13 User is offline   mycroft 

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Posted 2022-March-16, 16:39

Ah, I was still discussing "1-of-a-suit" in general. I didn't see the pivot to specifically 1M.

But 1M-3NT is even more well-organized. As I said, either 2M BAL or 4333M, 13-15, depending. The first, choice of games means we're still in (fairly) blind lead territory; the second gives away a lot if we pass, sure, but frequently is a "makes the same" hand - and when that's 9, it's magic, and when it's 10, it still wins at MPs. And opener's decision is pretty much laid out. Sure, 5-5 majors - but doesn't that just bid the known fit (see MikeH's comment about hiding a 5-card suit)? Sure - 5-5 majors with slam interest...

One of my partners likes it "a 4M raise with an outside A or K". Given that that's a hand type that's difficult to show without a specialized sequence, or without partner misreading and getting to unmakable slams, I'm happy to play that. The added benefits of "finding the otherwise unbiddable slam" and "knowing what to do over their 5x" is nice, but rare.

I'd be happy to play other things as well, as people are discussing here; I can see the use of all of them. But don't discount 1-3NT; p as a "energy saver and blind lead maker". Whatever you play it as, had better be worth at least as much as that.
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#14 User is offline   nullve 

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Posted 2022-March-16, 17:26

6NT
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#15 User is online   smerriman 

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Posted 2022-March-16, 18:11

View Postnullve, on 2022-March-16, 17:26, said:

6NT

Hey, if this shows a specific enough hand like the 3NT bid, exactly the same argument applies there too :)
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#16 User is offline   kereru67 

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Posted 2022-March-16, 20:07

OK what I'm getting from this is that the 3NT response should have a very specific meaning. If you have a 4 card major you should show it first because that may be the best spot. Something like 1-1-2-3NT is a good way to give the option to your partner, in case they raised you with 3 card support or a flat hand. So 4-3-3-3, no 4 card major, 13-15; or else some conventional treatment. It will almost never be the correct response to 1.
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#17 User is offline   P_Marlowe 

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Posted 2022-March-17, 05:50

View Postkereru67, on 2022-March-16, 20:07, said:

OK what I'm getting from this is that the 3NT response should have a very specific meaning. If you have a 4 card major you should show it first because that may be the best spot. Something like 1-1-2-3NT is a good way to give the option to your partner, in case they raised you with 3 card support or a flat hand. So 4-3-3-3, no 4 card major, 13-15; or else some conventional treatment. It will almost never be the correct response to 1.

Hiding a 4 card diamond suit is ok, with 44 in the minors, if your values are in the majors, 3NT will also be
perfect.
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#18 User is offline   Cyberyeti 

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Posted 2022-March-17, 07:51

View Postmikeh, on 2022-March-16, 16:01, said:

Much better, imo and on my experience, is that 1M 3OM shows an unspecified singleton (or in the case of 1H 3S, possibly also the much less common void spade).

Splinters are usually and imo should be played as limited in range.your range may vary but for me it’s just over a limit raise to just over an opening bid, so roughly 11-13.

Opener usually signs off in game and the opps don’t know what will appear in dummy and can’t usually get in a lead directing or sacrifice suggesting double.

Opener can ask if he has interest: cheapest bid asks and responses are LMH.

That leaves 1M 4m as void showing.

How you play 1S 4H is optional but must (obviously) be discussed. If it’s natural (as I play it….long, good texture hearts, less than opening values) then 1s3H includes a void heart, but now one can show it over 3S….3N is stiff club, etc, and 4H is heart void.


Not prepared to lose my 3 SJS over 1.

Also there are often 2 ways to bid these hands if I hold AJxx, x, AQJ10x, xxx I respond 3 to 1 and show my source of tricks rather than my singleton.
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#19 User is offline   mikeh 

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Posted 2022-March-17, 08:20

View PostCyberyeti, on 2022-March-17, 07:51, said:

Not prepared to lose my 3 SJS over 1.

Also there are often 2 ways to bid these hands if I hold AJxx, x, AQJ10x, xxx I respond 3 to 1 and show my source of tricks rather than my singleton.

To each his own.

Personally, strong jumpshifts seem to me to:

a) come up infrequently

b) preempt our constructive auctions on precisely those hands on which we most often need bidding space

With your AJxx x AQJ10x xxx my view is that splintering is bizarre and would reflect a very weak understanding of bidding concepts.

Bidding 3D seems, I say with respect, almost as bad.

While I would never use J2N with that hand, I can at least understand those who would. At least that gets across two of the four critical elements of the hand: a big fit and some slam interest.

Me: I’d force to game via 2D and then raise spades. Since for me 1S 2D 2S doesn’t show extra length (hence is a fairly common rebid) I may get to bid 4H next…showing (drumroll, please) 5+ diamonds, good spades,short hearts and slam interest.

And if partner makes the second commonest rebid, 2N, again I can bid 4H.

Funny how those sequences seem to describe my hand😀

2/1 has become the dominant bidding philosophy in the expert game (most big club methods, which are very popular with NA pairs, use 2/1 principles…I’m discussing this aspect, not the family of standard based methods grouped as 2/1) for a very good reason: conservation of bidding space.

Strong jumpshifts violate that principle. Of course, one can argue that tightly defining jumpshifts clarifies other strength showing sequences, since partner can exclude the jumpshift hand types when not used. Fwiw my view is that one ought very carefully to weigh the other uses to which the SJS bid can be put, so as to weigh the net costs and benefits.

For example, using 1S 3H as an unspecified singleton (or void heart) is a net, if often modest, winner when opener signs off, and loses very little, if any, compared to normal splinters when opener is interested. Plus it allows 1M 4m to show a void….while such hands are rare, there is a very big difference, in terms of slam potential, between a void and a stiff

In the other of my two partnerships, we use 1S 3D as invitational in hearts or a strong jumpshift in hearts, with 1S 3H showing a 4 card limit raise in spades. While I prefer the splinter usage, this other approach has worked well when it arises.
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#20 User is online   DavidKok 

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Posted 2022-March-17, 08:29

View Postmikeh, on 2022-March-17, 08:20, said:

Me: I’d force to game via 2D and then raise spades. Since for me 1S 2D 2S doesn’t show extra length (hence is a fairly common rebid) I may get to bid 4H next…showing (drumroll, please) 5+ diamonds, good spades,short hearts and slam interest.

And if partner makes the second commonest rebid, 2N, again I can bid 4H.

Funny how those sequences seem to describe my hand😀
I'd go so far as to say it shows exactly 5 diamonds, or a weak 6(+) suit (very improbable). With a good 6(+) diamonds you can presumably jump to 4 on the second round.
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