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jumps to 5NT


Tomi2

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Hi,

 

what does a jump to 5NT mean for you in situations, where no fit has been found and 4Nt would be invitional to a small slam,

 

for example: 1NT - 5NT or 2NT - 5NT or in my case in a polish club bidding: 1-3NT-5NT, 3NT is ballanced 13-15hcp with stoppers in majors but no 4 card suit

 

is there a standard meaning, does anyone have a special agreement on this?

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I think (but confell I am not sure) the standard meaning is "forcing to 6NT, invitational to seven." That is what I would expect it to mean in a partnership that had not specifically discussed the bid. Partner reacts pretty much as he would to 4NT invitational to six, bidding a good four-card suit at the six level or a good five-card suit at the seven level, otherwise choosing between 6NT and 7NT.

 

TLGoodwin

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Usually the quantitative.

 

However, I have been playing with a rookie that 5NT is always pick-a-minor. It actually seems to come up a tad more often. When's the last time you actually bid 2NT-P-5NT? However, the simplistic message of "I have both minors -- pick one dammit" seems to be a tad more frequent and useful, IMO.

 

Not that either is all that important in the greater scheme of things...

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Usually pick a slam, in the auctions you described where no suit has been bid its quantitative to 7N

This is my view too, but the 'auld Scots' play this as asking for 4-card suits upwards with no interest in a grand slam.

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I have looked up 1N-5N in the Encyclopedia and I can tell you that they don't tell you.

 

Under Quantitative 5NT they explain that it is an invitatition to 7 but they do not say if the Quantitative meaning is standard.

 

Under Five Notrump they explain that if the 5NT bid is undiscussed but "clearly forcing" then the BWS 2001 consensus of experts says that it is pick-a-slam. Now there is sort of a weird logic here: If 1N-5N forces 6 and invites 7, then since it is "clearly forcing" it must be, if undiscussed, pick a slam.

 

I doubt they mean for this logic to be taken so literally. Playing 1N-5N as pick a slam seems odd to me unless responder has 4-4-4-4 distribution. So I think it is a quantitative raise to at least 6.

 

 

I have always assumed 1N-5N invites 7. I have never used it or seen it used. It's like opening 5H or 5S. AS I understand it. partner should look only for the A and K of the bid major. If he has neither he passes, if he has one he raises to 6, if he has both he raises to 7. Never used that one either, but if it ever comes up, I am ready. I hope partner is also ready.

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For some rare bids, like opening 5M or raising 1NT (or 2NT) to 5NT, when you have no special partnership agreement (meaning you've never discussed it, and never assigned a particular meaning to it), the only thing that makes logical sense in the context of most natural bidding systems is that the former asks responder to bid 6 or 7 with 1 or 2 of the top trump honors, and the latter asks opener to bid 7NT if he's maximum for his previous bid, otherwise to bid 6NT. But I wouldn't bet the farm that a novice partner (including "perpetual" novices) or a pickup partner would be able to figure that out at the table. B)
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Hi,

 

what does a jump to 5NT mean for you in situations, where no fit has been found and 4Nt would be invitional to a small slam,

 

for example: 1NT - 5NT or 2NT - 5NT or in my case in a polish club bidding: 1-3NT-5NT, 3NT is ballanced 13-15hcp with stoppers in majors but no 4 card suit

 

is there a standard meaning, does anyone have a special agreement on this?

1NT - 5NT

2NT - 5NT

 

quantitative, and I would assume the same

for the sequence you gave.

 

With kind regards

Marlowe

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  • 4 weeks later...

With a very good partner at my local club, we had this auction the last time I played. Partner dealt and bid...

 

 

 

1 - 2 - 2 - 2 (4th suit) - 3 NT

 

I have Q10 , K109x , K10 , AKQx

 

I figured that he had a 5-3-4-1 pattern with between 16 to 20 point range.

 

Since I wasn't playing with my regular partner, I couldn't ask for Aces without a possibility of missunderstanding. (We play SuperGerber, after a natural 3NT bid

5 asks for Aces).

 

My 10's and 9's in partners suits figured to be worth their weight in gold and I made a quantative bid of 5NT, inviting 7NT and insisting on 6NT.

 

My p closed the auction in 6NT which was made.

 

Cheers Theo

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1. Its pick-a-slam in a large majority of auctions.

 

2. Its Grand Slam Force when we have a specific trump suit.

 

3. Its invitational to 7 (and forcing to 6) directly over a NT opening.

 

4. I can think of one instance where its NF: 2 - 2 - 5N. I think I've made this call once in my life. I held a balanced 29 or 3) I think

 

5. I think its 2 places to play in some rare instances, e.g., 3 - dbl - 5 - 5N.

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