Jump to content

Mexican 2D


Would you advise to include 5M332 hands in a Mexican 2D opening?  

24 members have voted

  1. 1. Would you advise to include 5M332 hands in a Mexican 2D opening?

    • Yes, I would allow both Majors
      16
    • Yes, but I would only allow 5H, but not 5S
      1
    • Yes, but I would only allow 5S, but not 5H
      0
    • No
      7


Recommended Posts

A Mexican 2 opening shows 18-19HCP balanced. Question is: do you include 5 card Majors, do you only allow 1 of the Majors, or none? Please explain why or why not.

 

Advantages of this opening is clear: 1m-1M-2NT is now free to show some kind of support. What about 1-1-2NT, do you want to use this bid to show strong support, or do you better use Gazzilli in this case?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

First, that ain't the way I learned Mexican 2.

 

Aside from that, your post makes me wonder about the context of this bid. What's the rest of the NT ladder look like? And what the hell is Gazzilli? :rolleyes:

 

I suppose the actual range doesn't matter much. I'd use Romex Stayman, or at least some version of Puppet Stayman, over the opening. That''ll cater to the 5 card major.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

A Mexican 2 opening shows 18-19HCP balanced.  Question is: do you include 5 card Majors, do you only allow 1 of the Majors, or none?  Please explain why or why not.

 

Advantages of this opening is clear: 1m-1M-2NT is now free to show some kind of support.  What about 1-1-2NT, do you want to use this bid to show strong support, or do you better use Gazzilli in this case?

Yes, I play it with a 5 card major, offshape often. I basically try and throw as many 18-19 hcp hands without a stiff or a void or 5 major/4minor combo into 2D as possible. I try and avoid opening 2D with a 5 card major and a side xx suit. That is 2 flaws, one too many. :rolleyes:

 

The reason is not because 2D is such a great convention but to make my one level bids more constructive since we open on such crappy hands.

 

I just use the jump to 2nt by opener 1x=1y=2nt as 17 hcp balanced...1nt=14-16.

 

The other option is to make 2d=17-19 and use the 2nt jump rebid for something else.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Try this:

 

12-16 open 1 of a suit, rebid 1NT

17-18 open 1 of a suit, rebid 2NT

19-20 open 1NT (artificial, also includes hands just too weak for a GF), rebid 2NT

21-22 open 2 rebid 2NT

23-24 open 2 rebid 2NT

25-26 open 2NT (natural, forcing)

27-28 open 2 jump in NT

29-30 open 2NT, rebid 4NT

 

2 can include game forcing hands with a primary diamond suit, one or two suited. Now an auction like 2-2-3 shows a diamond two suiter (3 asks for the second suit). 2-2-3 shows a diamond one suiter. Similarly, 2-2-3 shows a club two suiter, and 2-2-3 shows a club one suiter.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

When I played it, I allowed weak five card majors and played a transfer and fit bid as responses.

 

I think the best component to this bid is the 1x-1y-2nt rebid and likewise the 3x rebid; I play this as fit denying and showing, respectively.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

17-18 open 1 of a suit, rebid 2NT

[rant]

 

I don't get you Standard American guys, I really don't.

 

Used to be, that Mexican was 19-21 and 2NT was 22-23.

 

Somehow, these values have magically dropped, so that Mexican is 18-19 and 2NT is 20-21.

 

Now, the recomendation is to open 1 of a suit and rebid 2NT with a mighty 17, even though partner might have 5, or 3, or in a few cases 0.

 

It can't be that bidding has become more accurate over the years because, well, 2NT is 2NT. Nor do I think that it's the wonder of bidding games red in IMPs, because nobody has said that such-and-such is an IMP only bid, or red only.

 

So what's happened here? Has declarer play improved that much, while defensive play has dropped down to nothing? Or are people just crazy?

 

Cripes, in Precision I play 1-1-1NT as 16 to a really rotten 20. Why? Because, well, I really don't enjoy being at 2NT with 19 across 4, let alone 17 across 3.

 

But this must be poor play on my part, because God knows everybody else seems to enjoy it, even when they've also gotten the info that they're looking at a probable misfit.

[/rant]

 

As far as Mexican goes, if 2-2 is passable (0-4 hcp, no suit, says nothing about hearts) then sure, I don't see why you shouldn't bid 2 with a 5 card major. If 2 is a transfer to spades, then I would think bidding 1 of a major would make more sense.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

no one plays 2d=2h as natural and passable...good God!

 

to repeat ...2D is not a cosmic convention..the goal is to make your one level opening bids more constructive.

I open one d on:

KJx..QJx..KTxxxxx..void

 

not

 

 

Axx..Axx...AKxx...Axx

Yes you can cite danger hands.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The standard american NT ladder is screwed up becaused people don't or didn't understand the difference between point count requirements for balanced and unbalanced hands and because SA has way to wide a range on the opening one of a suit bid. People have been trying to fix that last problem by moving the bar where 2 starts for unbalanced hands, and dragging the NT ladder down along with it.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

The standard american NT ladder is screwed up becaused people don't or didn't understand the difference between point count requirements for balanced and unbalanced hands and because SA has way to wide a range on the opening one of a suit bid. People have been trying to fix that last problem by moving the bar where 2 starts for unbalanced hands, and dragging the NT ladder down along with it.

I really object to comments on sayc such at this.

 

Sayc in one form or another has been around for 60 years or more.

 

If we do not know how to bid a system after 60 years or its improvements it is not our(non expert) fault.

1) I continue to believe we lose because of how we play the cards not the system

2) after 60 years or so....the most common problems should be well known with a fix or revised improvement..

Link to comment
Share on other sites

no one plays 2d=2h as natural and passable...good God!

Then it's a good thing nobody suggested that, huh?

 

To repeat myself, one method is that 2 is 0-4 and no suit. This lets you stop at 2M if you open Mexican with a 5 card major and partner has nothing.

 

If you really need me to Google for sources, I suppose I can. But that is the original definition of the 2 bid in 'bid to win, play for pleasure', which invented the Mexican 2.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I really object to comments on sayc such at this.

I didn't say SAYC, I sais "Standard American". That said, SAYC is a form of SA, so yeah, my post applies to it.

 

Sixty years ago, the SA NT ladder looked like this:

 

13-15 rebid 1NT

16-18 open 1NT

19-20 rebid 2NT

21-23 open 2NT

24-26 open 3NT

 

Higher bids were ill-defined, but they're rare anyway.

 

Then the artificial 2 came along, and we got

 

21-22 open 2NT

23-24 open 2, rebid 2NT

25-26 open 2, rebid 3NT

 

Then people started opening lighter, and the response to that was to push the range of each of these steps down by one point, and extend it to three points for the 2 and rebid hands. The latter in spite of the fact that there is good reason to limit the range to 2 points. So object all you like. Doesn't change anything. B)

 

I never said that it was anybody's fault this is so, but if anyone is to blame it is the experts from whom we get most of our system. There are, otoh, quite a few of what I call "lemming bids" - bids that people use because "everybody" uses them, that are not necessarily the best.

 

The goal of any player (at matchpoints at least) is to get to the par contract - the one that in theory everyone else will be in - and beat the others by playing better. If everyone is using the same system, even if it's flawed, most everyone will get to the same contract. So yeah, the winning is in the play. So what?

 

People can come up with lots of reasons not to change something. Usually they boil down to "I don't want to make the effort".

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Whereagles: if that's addressed to me, I don't think I specified the meaning of responses to 2. Neither did the OP, AFAIR. I would think 2NT would be forcing. You might still get to 3NT from the wrong side, sure.

 

Over the past nearly 20 years or so, George Rosenkranz has written four books on the Romex system. Mexican 2 is a keystone of that system - although not in the form of the OP. It shows 21-22 or 27-28 balanced, or GF with primary diamonds. In *each* of those four books, the responses to 2 have changed, attemptng to minimize departure from where "everyone else" will be and to avoid wrong siding the contract. I would think one could make the same attempts over a lower ranged balanced opening.

 

BTW, the weaker balanced hand type occurs roughly 85% of the time, the GF less than one percent. So the latest response structure caters to the 21-22 balanced hand.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

-22 or 27-28 balanced, or GF with primary diamonds. In *each* of those four books, the responses to 2 have changed, attemptng to minimize departure from where "everyone else" will be and to avoid wrong siding the contract.

Which get uglier and uglier.

 

It's been a looong time since I played Mexican 2 (and even then it was 19-21), but if I did, and I played it as 18-19, I think I'd prefer:

 

2: No game interest, no suit. Opener can place the contract.

2: Relay to NT. Auctions include:

........2-2-2NT-3- Invitational- 6+ clubs with about 5 hcp, at least one honor (AKQ) in clubs, no honors (AKQ) outside of clubs.

........2-2-2NT-3, same, but in diamonds.

........2-2-2NT-3NT Balanced 12-13 count.

2NT: Relay to clubs Auctions include:

.......2-2NT-3-Pass, of course

.......2-2NT-3-3: Slam interest with a diamond suit.

.......2-2NT-3-3NT: Slam interest with a club suit.

3: Stayman

3: Transfer to hearts

3: Transfer to spades

3: Transfer to 3NT, balanced 5-11 count.

3NT: Forcing, asking for specific aces, I guess.

 

So what do most people play over it?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Actually, that response structure looks interesting. ;)

 

I dunno about most people, but the current Romex structure is:

  • Pass: a yarborough with a long diamond suit.
  • 2H: 0-9 HCP, no slam interest opposite 21-22 balanced, < 4 hearts
  • 2S: 10+ HCP, 3+ controls (usually), slam interest
  • 2NT: transfer, 0-3 HCP, 6+ clubs, no 4 card major, or possibly a major two suiter
  • 3C: special Stayman, at least 4-4 in the majors and only game interest.
  • 3D: transfer, 0-9 HCP, exactly 5 hearts, < 4 spades.
  • 3H: transfer, 0-3 HCP, 5+ spades, < 4 hearts, signoff
  • 3S: balanced game only hand, exactly 4 hearts, < 4 spades
  • 3NT: at least 5-5 in the majors, game interest only
  • 4C: 6+ hearts, to play in 4 hearts
  • 4D: 6+ spades, to play in 4 spades

Link to comment
Share on other sites

If you have a strong balanced hand including a 5cM, and you don't open it 1M, then you're going to need a way to find the 5-3 fit, if it exists. Using the Romex version of 2, the bidding might go 2-2-2NT-3-3, where 3 is Romex Stayman, and 3 shows 4 or 5 hearts. You might end up in hearts played from the wrong side, the auction continuing 3-4-P, but this is one of the few sequences that does that.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

When you get 2 as weak response, isn't opener going to bid 2 or pass with a 5 card Major?

Nope. After 2-2, 2 shows a GF with primary diamonds and secondary spades, probably 5-4, although other shapes are possible as long as the diamonds are longer. If opener has a balanced hand, he bids 2NT, or rarely 3NT with the 27-28 count. Doesn't matter if he has a five card major or not. NB: over 2, 2NT is NF, 3NT is forcing to game or 4NT, and 2 is forcing to game.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

When you get 2 as weak response, isn't opener going to bid 2 or pass with a 5 card Major?

If you use the system I suggested (which is close to the original), then yes, 2 is p/c. If you use Blackshoe's method, which I believe accurately describes the most current method, then you can't stop below 2NT.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

And then people started to open lighter and lighter and now the ladder looks like:

 

11 - 13: Rebid 1N

14 - 16: Open 1N

17 - 18: Open 1, rebid 2 (or 2NT after 1 - 1)

19 - 20: Open 2NT

21 - 22: Open Multi rebid 2NT

23 - 24: Open 2 rebid 2NT

25 - 26: Open 2 rebid 3NT

27+: Too rare to worry about but not a problem using Ryall negatives after 2.

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...