Jump to content

Decent 6-4


pclayton

Your rebid after a forcing NT  

39 members have voted

  1. 1. Your rebid after a forcing NT

    • 2 Diamonds
      19
    • 2 Hearts
      10
    • 3 Hearts
      9
    • Other
      1


Recommended Posts

Opposite a stiff , despite the 5 loser hand, is it worth that much in 3 passed out? If pard prefers back to 2 then he has a doub and you are back in business with the 3 invite.

 

If pard bids 2NT over 2 are you going for the NT game or will you then bid 3.......oh wait, I bid 3, darn! At least over 2 when he bids 2NT you feel a lot better about trying NT.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I think its real close between 2 and 3 too. 2 doesn't make my list; I'd rather bid 4.

 

There's sort of a conundrum here. If pard has a side diamond fit, we want to play 4 or SIX 's. As a 3 supporter, its exactly the minimum's with a fit that make 4 excellent: xxx, x, AQxx, xxxxx where pard is passing 2.

 

However, if I bid 3, we can't evaluate through pard's interest if we bid 2.

 

I've just chosen 3 because its the best value bid. I'm giving up on the magical 6.

 

3 also has the advantage of making the defense to 4 tougher.

 

3 - 100

2 - 99

4 - 50

2 - 30

Link to comment
Share on other sites

:rolleyes: I was taught by some of Louisiana's best players a few years ago that at IMPs 2 is the proper bid with a 6-4 hand that is much better than a min, but not good enough for 3. The idea is that you do get to game opposite pard's 9 to 11 count and doubleton heart after he raises diamonds or bids 2 NT.

 

My unenterprising 2 rebid cost me a vul game swing in the finals of a state championship team event.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

:rolleyes:  I was taught by some of Louisiana's best players a few years ago that at IMPs 2 is the proper bid with a 6-4 hand that is much better than a min, but not good enough for 3.  The idea is that you do get to game opposite pard's 9 to 11 count and doubleton heart after he raises diamonds or bids 2 NT.

 

My unenterprising 2 rebid cost me a vul game swing in the finals of a state championship team event.

as usual if 2h says...14-15 hcp, 3QT and 6 card suit you are fine. 2D can say more. What does 1h say?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

;)  I was taught by some of Louisiana's best players a few years ago that at IMPs 2 is the proper bid with a 6-4 hand that is much better than a min, but not good enough for 3.  The idea is that you do get to game opposite pard's 9 to 11 count and doubleton heart after he raises diamonds or bids 2 NT.

 

My unenterprising 2 rebid cost me a vul game swing in the finals of a state championship team event.

as usual if 2h says...14-15 hcp, 3QT and 6 card suit you are fine. 2D can say more. What does 1h say?

<_< A typical weak hand for the 2 bid would range from (10 HCP):

 

xx

KQ10xxx

AJ9

xx

 

up to (13 HCP):

 

Jx

AJ98xx

AQJx

x

 

a three heart bid ought to look like (16 HCP):

 

Kx

AKJ10xx

AJ8x

x

 

the 'in between' 2 call is designed to let me bid 4 over a 2NT call, 3 over a 2 preference or a 3 raise. Granted, I would like to have stronger diamonds.

 

If partner has a scattered 9-11 HCP, I want to be in game with the given hand (14 HCP) opposite:

 

Kxx

Qx

KJx

J10xxx

 

which is 10 HCP w/o much of a fit.

 

If pard gives me a 2 preference, I will raise to 3 and play there making three opposite

 

Jxx

xx

KJ10

Qxxxx

 

or be in 4 making opposite

 

Axx

xx

KJ10

Qxxxx

 

If you like Mike and Anders' I Fought the Law evaluation, you will correctly deduce that because of its splendid distribution, this hand will make 4 opposite 6 HCP IF they are all working (e.g. KJ of diamonds and the heart queen).

 

Given only a choice, I think I would sooner bid 3 than 2

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Jx

AJ98xx

AQJx

x

 

 

Excellent question, pass or 1h or 2h opening bid in first or second seat if playing sound openings?

Wow!

 

I would consider this to be a solid opener, indeed with modest extras, even if I agreed to play 'sound' opening bids <_<

 

I would think that even Tobias Stone would have opened this 1

Link to comment
Share on other sites

:huh:

After 1 NT forcing, in my opinion, best bid could be 2 diamonds: I have only 14 points, but it seems a good distributional hand, and the possibility of a slam, with only 27/28 points on line is high.

On the 2nd p's bid, I can give the distribution:

- if p gives fi in d or h, i make cuebid in s,

- if p bid 2 NT i bid 3 h, giving a 6 4 distribution;

- if p bid 3 c, 3rd suite, I bid 3 s, ambiguous: 4th suite or cue bid .

sry for my poor english

black man

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Jx

AJ98xx

AQJx

x

 

 

Excellent question, pass or 1h or 2h opening bid in first or second seat if playing sound openings?

Ok, I note Al Roth opens 2H.

 

Hope this sidetrack into Roth sound openings generates new discussion, thought and debate on the widely accepted view of lighter openings, random weak 2 bids and the generally accepted thesis of opening first is a big advantage compared to the loss.

 

As a contrarian investment manager my interest rises when almost all the experts and my favorite partner are sold that one style is big loser and not worth considering. I think his exact comment was "can I just slit my throat now"? :P.

 

That may also explain why I was often on the losing end of my law school debates. :P.

 

Thanks for feedback and thoughtful comments from all.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...