Jump to content

Forcing or not?


Recommended Posts

Auction:

 

1 - 1NT (forcing or not, your pref.)

2NT - 3//

 

Do you play this as forcing or not? I heard some play it as not forcing if a minor, but 3 forcing. What about you? Does your partner agree?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi,

 

never though about it, but according to our systemic

agreement, it should / would be forcing.

 

We play weak jump shifts (4-7) and one suiter which

go via a forcing NT 8-10, hence after a bid which would

show something like 16-18 the bid has to be forcing, ...

 

With kind regards

Marlowe

Link to comment
Share on other sites

If 1NT is forcing or semi-forcing (i.e. any hand not strong enough to force to game) I play all suit bids over 2NT as forcing. A bit of an imps-orientated approach, you get to the right games/slams at the cost of playing in the wrong partscore.

 

Because of the rest of my methods 2NT is always balanced, never 5422 or 6322 which helps.

 

In an Acol-style context where 1NT is about 5-9 I play these as non-forcing as any decent 6-card minor / 5-card heart suit would have strained to make a 2/1 on the first round.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

If 1NT is forcing or semi-forcing (i.e. any hand not strong enough to force to game) I play all suit bids over 2NT as forcing. A bit of an imps-orientated approach, you get to the right games/slams at the cost of playing in the wrong partscore.

You ought to play transfers then. The downside of transfers is that you can't play in 3, but if everything's forcing you can't do that anyway.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

If 1NT is forcing or semi-forcing (i.e. any hand not strong enough to force to game) I play all suit bids over 2NT as forcing.  A bit of an imps-orientated approach, you get to the right games/slams at the cost of playing in the wrong partscore.

You ought to play transfers then. The downside of transfers is that you can't play in 3, but if everything's forcing you can't do that anyway.

Actually I think the answer is to make 2NT artificial and stick 18-19 balanced in the 2C bid. But that's a different discussion.

 

And we've added so much new system in the last year we're having a temporary embargo while it all beds down.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

we play all NF there, but we also respond very light with a single suited hand, since we play intermediate JS. I'm not sure it's the best treatment, though.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Echo, echo, echo.

 

2NT as artificial -- check

2 to handle all tweener hands -- check (plus a lot of creative 2NT openings)

 

But, if natural (ugh!)...

 

Transfers -- check (just changed recently)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Usually I play these as forcing.

 

While transfers obviously help you on the hands where you want to sign off in a suit (you can't do this if suit bids are forcing) they actually make things more difficult on some slammish hands. Besides 3 (where you are most of a level lower than 3 transfer to clubs), it is also the case that opener usually has a cheap cuebid and responder often doesn't. So if you want to look for slam in diamonds (say) provided that opener has the right hand, playing transfers you will see:

 

3 transfer

3 forced

3NT (slam try; else would bid 3NT direct)

four-level cuebid by opener if he likes diamonds; else pass

 

Whereas without transfers:

 

3 (natural forcing)

three-level cuebid by opener if he likes diamonds (save many steps!) else 3NT

 

Of course, I do like to play gazzilli also, which nicely removes the NF hands from the equation (strong 2NT rebid hands go via 1M-1N-2-2-2NT which is already a GF sequence; without enough for game responder breaks the 2 puppet).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I think many good players here in Norway play the 2NT bid as GF in a natural system, so then transfer looks good (and of course forcing), even though I think those who use the 2NT bid as GF use 3 as responder as an unknown 5card minor etc, I don't know the full scheme.
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...