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luis

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3D. I usually bid 2S with this hand type but I feel my hand is too good and my diamonds are superb. I like everything about my hand, and if we pard bids 3N and we miss a spade fit, we will likely run diamonds and make it.

 

Where are the candians for the 2C bid here? :ph34r: I'm surprised you didnt list it in your first post, and it would be my choice with weaker diamonds and similar values (with a shade less I'd bid 2S...)

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I dislike this hand type (reverse with 3 card support) and therefore have chosen, playing precision, to use the jumprebid to 2NT for a distributional reverse with 3 card support.

 

In absence of that I'll jump to 3D

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3 is the first choice. I will not jump to 3 on a 3-card fit (much less splinter :ph34r: ). The counter-indication is that 3 might kill the fit, and in any case consumes a lot of bidding space.

There is my 2nd choice: 2. It saves space, is much more flexible and keeps open the possibility of supporting .

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I dislike this hand type (reverse with 3 card support) and therefore have chosen, playing precision, to use the jumprebid to 2NT for a distributional reverse with 3 card support.

 

In absence of that I'll jump to 3D

I do the opposite ...

 

I jump to 3 with three-card spade support and rebid 2NT without 3-card spade support as this hand is more likely to have side-suit stoppers for NTs.

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I've said it before and I'll say it again :blink:

 

3 = 15+, 6+, 3 card support

3NT = 15+, 6+, 0-2 card support

 

It works out great and it backfires as well. But at least you'll find your Major fits :ph34r:

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I hardly speak for all canadians, but out here we use 2 as a stall only as a last resort. Not only do I rarely use the bid, but I like to have a hand on which I am reasonably comfortable should partner pass: here I would not be comfortable because of my playing strength and the power of my as an almost self-sufficient trump suit.

 

3 seems right here. Sure, we may miss our fit. I think that these hand types can be covered using 'Cole' (which, if memory serves, uses 2 as an artificial bid) but that requires a willingness to rebid 1N on semi-balanced hands with a stiff in partner's major, and that has always seemed to me to be too high a cost to pay.

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I dislike this hand type (reverse with 3 card support) and therefore have chosen, playing precision, to use the jumprebid to 2NT for a distributional reverse with 3 card support.

 

In absence of that I'll jump to 3D

I do the opposite ...

 

I jump to 3 with three-card spade support and rebid 2NT without 3-card spade support as this hand is more likely to have side-suit stoppers for NTs.

 

In a non-precision context, I agree that the scheme you use seems more efficient ( e.g. there is indeed the chance of having many extra stoppers, because the power of the hand might exceed 15 hcp).

 

 

However, I have thought about the 2 ways, and came to the conclusion that, in a precision context, I have the impression that most times, the limited 1D opener (max 15 hcp) worth a distributional reverse has most values concentrated in diamonds and usually, say, 1 honor and a half outside.

 

Under such conditions, I believe that most times, NT is better played from responder's side, when it's right, not unlike the Gambling-type hands, despite the differences (suit might not be solid, extra outside stoppers, etc etc).

 

On the other hand, when we do have a a fit in the major, it's undoubtedly better to start low, from the 2NT level, in order to be able to describe the pattern if responder has slam prospects.

 

============

 

Of course, playing the way I do, it is necessary to have a way to checkback fo stoppers when bidding (uncontested) goes 1D-1M-3D.

 

This issue was decsribed in the following past thread:

http://forums.bridgebase.com/index.php?showtopic=10057

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