kenrexford Posted May 2, 2008 Report Share Posted May 2, 2008 There's more to the value of a 2♣ overcall of 1♦ than simply the preemptive value, IMO. As a contrast, consider what initially appears to be the exact same preemptive effect (as to number of spaces taken) for 1♠-2♥ or 1♥-2♦. In the first (1♠-2♥), the overcall actually enables Responder to better handle a difficult pattern. Had you passed, Responder may have had a constructive hand with both minors, which is extremely difficult to handle. Does he bid 1NT forcing? If so, what next? Your overcall just helped. In the second (1♥-2♦), your overcall does not really cause that much of a problem, because only one unbid major is in play. Instead, you may actually effect a de facto transfer bid, so that the stronger opponent Declares (lead into stronger hand, not skill). The 1♦-2♣ auction, in contrast, causes a problem when Responder has only one major. Had you passed, this would have worked itself out. Now, suddenly a problem develops. Similarly, 1♣-2♦ causes massive problems. 1♣-1♠ less so. In this sequence, the heart suit is not lost at all. In fact, you have now created an ability to make a 5-card 2/1 bid, an auction start that would not otherwise be possible (probably). Plus, hearts, when 4-4, will again be declared by the stronger side more often. So, IMO, the issue is not the space consumed. It is the impact on the auction that is critical. Some calls, although "consuming space," actually in a sense create more space by changing the assumptions and limiting the alternatives Responder's options must cover. Some calls also suffer from lead-directional downsides. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jtfanclub Posted May 2, 2008 Report Share Posted May 2, 2008 These two situations are completely different. No, the situations are exactly the same. It's a 2/1 overcall in which you have a singleton in an unbid major. you think (1♠)-2♣ and (1♦)-2♣ are exactly the same... wow. Well, if they were indistinguishable, I guess everybody would just say "see other thread". Sure, 2 clubs over 1 diamond is more pre-emptive, and not just for the space lost. The problem is, it's more pre-emptive for both sides. If your partner has a 10 count with a 4 card major, can he really afford to pass? It's made even worse because you have 4 diamonds, and only 4 cards in the majors- the odds that it's going to pass out are rather slim. I am fully aware that some people bid 2 clubs over 1 diamond with almost anything and then figure that somehow their partner will know when he should bid on. IMHO, it's actually worse in MPs- who wants to make 90 when the field is making 110 or 140? Can't afford to miss a 4-4 major suit fit. Sorry, I don't buy that these are completely different situations. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
the hog Posted May 2, 2008 Report Share Posted May 2, 2008 2C definitely, and yes they are TOTALLY different situations JT. I would pass over 1S. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jtfanclub Posted May 2, 2008 Report Share Posted May 2, 2008 2C definitely, and yes they are TOTALLY different situations JT. I would pass over 1S. If you consider it borderline in both cases and pass with one and bid with the other, more power to you. But would you pass 1 spade with: ♠ 832 ♥ 4 ♦ AK972 ♣ AJ98 since that's my original assertion (if you're going to pass 1 spade with that, how can you bid over 1 diamond with a hand that's so much worse for overcalling). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dcvetkov Posted May 2, 2008 Report Share Posted May 2, 2008 These two situations are completely different. No, the situations are exactly the same. It's a 2/1 overcall in which you have a singleton in an unbid major. The scoring is different- one is MPs NV, the other is IMPs Vul. If the decision on both is based on venue, say so. Me, I don't buy it. On the one hand, Match Points gives you a little more leeway when NV. On the other hand, -150 is probably a loss of 1 or 2 IMPs, but darn close to a 0 in MPs. I would not feel more comfortable if partner raised me to 3♣ on this one if we were NV in MPs than if we were Vul in IMPs. Partner knows the scoring too.No, they're distinctly different, in that the 2♣ call here _removes bidding space_ and is thus slightly preemptive on the opponents. expect Kxx x Kxxx QJ98x. There is one point here that I agree, that is 2C, has certainly some preemptive value and removes several layers of bidding space, so LHO will be much less comfortable, then responding easy one of major. For that reason alone, I would bid 2C. On the other hand, overcalling 2m over 1 spade, has less chances to gain with a bad suit, simply LHO is not so inconvinient as in the first case. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
han Posted May 2, 2008 Author Report Share Posted May 2, 2008 You are repeating yourself JT. And I doubt we'll miss a 4-4 major suit fit. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jtfanclub Posted May 2, 2008 Report Share Posted May 2, 2008 We'd gotten off topic. So your partners give up on finding a 4-4 major suit fit when you overcall with 2 clubs? How about a 5-3 heart fit? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
whereagles Posted May 2, 2008 Report Share Posted May 2, 2008 Totally obvious 2♣ because 1m-2om are some of the most ANNOYING overcalls there is. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
han Posted May 2, 2008 Author Report Share Posted May 2, 2008 We'd gotten off topic. So your partners give up on finding a 4-4 major suit fit when you overcall with 2 clubs? How about a 5-3 heart fit? I just pointed out that we won't miss a 4-4 major suit fit because we don't have a 4-card major. You are correct that we do not have a way to look for 4-4 major suit fit after a 2m overcall. That doesn't mean that it will never be found of course, but it is a argument against overcalling 2m when you have a 4-card major. Especially if you are too weak to show the major later. We have fine methods for finding 5-3 heart fits. Advancer shows hearts, overcaller raises. Again, this is not an issue with this hand because we don't have 3 hearts. We do have 3 spades but we are so light that if partner won't be able to bid spades then we are not likely to miss game. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.