Jump to content

1NT - 2D - 2H -2S


Ant590

Recommended Posts

I would play it as 5H, 4S, might only be invitational but I would never pass it...i.e. maybe invitational but forcing if that makes any sense, so you can stop in 3M.

 

If I didn't play 1NT-2C-2D-2M as NF and I think you should, then I'd play it as 5-4 invitational and play the transfer sequence as GF I suppose.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

assuming you do not play garbage stayman with a pickup partner what is the difference between the above bidding and 1NT-2cl -2d -2h?

Every beginner in USA at least learns garbage stayman so I doubt any american would assume anything other than garbage stayman. Indeed, I don't have any idea what 2C then 2H is not playing garbage stayman because I never learned any other way.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

With all due respect, the sequence 1N-2d-2H-2S should show 5-5, NOT 5-4, whether or not one plays Smolen. With 5-4, Start with Stayman, then bid (or show) the 5-card suit, showing 4 of the other by implication. The transfer to H, followed by 2S, shows invitational values; transfer to spades, then bid H, shows GF.

 

With a live partner with whom I've been able to discuss such things, I really like 1N-2c-2d-3d to show 5-5 with invitational + strength, which then frees up both other sequences for silly things like splinter-showing.

 

 

Mike

Link to comment
Share on other sites

As has been pointed out earlier in the thread, it depends on whether or not you play garbage Stayman, i.e. how you play 1nt-2c-2d-2h. A fairly large number of people like to play that as both majors weak, on the theory that this is both more common than 4-5 inv, and scores better than either passing out 1nt or transferring to a 5 cd major, sometimes finding a 5-2 fit instead of playing 4-4 in the other major.

 

If you are playing it as both majors weak, obviously you can't also use it as 4-5 inv, then have to use some other sequence to handle that.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

If not playing Smolen it has to be forcing I think.

I guess nobody doesn't play Smolen anymore, otherwise we would know that 1N 2C 2D 3H shows 5 hearts with a game-forcing hand :)

>1N 2C 2D 3H shows 5 hearts

 

Playing Smolen as I know it, it would show a 4 card Spade suit and 5 hearts.

 

Playing Smolen you bid the 4 card suit, not the 5.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

There are nine and sixty ways of constructing tribal lays,

And every single one of them is right!

 

Rudyard Kipling, "In the Neolithic Age", Stanza 5

 

There are at least that many ways to construct a system of responses and rebids over 1NT, and pickup partner or not, if he makes this call when he has no clue how it will be interpreted, he's an idiot.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

If not playing Smolen it has to be forcing I think.

I guess nobody doesn't play Smolen anymore, otherwise we would know that 1N 2C 2D 3H shows 5 hearts with a game-forcing hand :)

Lol, you caught me :) Anyway, is this 2 really non-forcing in SAYC? I can see the rationale, it just never occurred to me.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Every beginner in USA at least learns garbage stayman so I doubt any american would assume anything other than garbage stayman. Indeed, I don't have any idea what 2C then 2H is not playing garbage stayman because I never learned any other way.

for players not using garbage stayman (there are many of those) 1NT-2cl-2d-2h can show a 7-8 HCP hand with an inconvenience to playing in NT, such a singleton somewhere in a hand not strong enough to bid 3cl/d over 2 h and unable to bid 2NT because of the distribution. it is for instance commonly played this way in France where btw 1NT-2d-2h-2sp shows a weak 5 5 hand is nf

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Every beginner in USA at least learns garbage stayman so I doubt any american would assume anything other than garbage stayman. Indeed, I don't have any idea what 2C then 2H is not playing garbage stayman because I never learned any other way.

I think you are dead wrong that beginners are taught garbage stayman (1N 2C 2D 2H = weak 4+/4+ majors). I think that is an advanced bid. If you ask a normal B/I what "garbage stayman" is, you will likely get the answer that with a weak 4450, you bid stayman and pass opener's rebid.

 

The original Goren/Std American method of showing an invitational major 5-4 was 1N-2C-2D-2M where M is the 5-card major.

And 1N-2C-2D-3M was 5-4 GF. Smolen's change was to bid the 4-card major rather than the 5-card major.

 

Once you add true Garbage Stayman, then you need to replace the invitational 5h/4s sequence 1N-2C-2D-2H. Many players use 1N-2D-2H-2S for 5h/4s, but keep the 1N-2C-2D-2S for 5s/4h.

 

How are B/I's usually taught to show a major 5-5? Show a 5-4, then if opener returns to NT, insist on the 2nd 5-card major.

 

Some are taught that a 5-5 is shown by transfer and bid other major. Hearts then spades is invitational, spades then hearts is GF. Forgive most B/I for forgetting which is which, since it does not come up very often.

 

HOWEVER, once you get to the Advanced/Expert end of the player spectrum, the entire NT sequences diverge and there is no standard anymore.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Whats Garbage Stayman? (I wasnt taught it but I dont think I want to add it either)

You probably already play it without calling it that.

eg what would you bid over 1NT with and very few points?

xxxx

xxxx

xxxx

x

 

or

xxxx

xxxxx

xx

xx

 

I suspect 2C, and pass any bid opener made on the first hand and pass 2M on the second or bid 2H over 2D.

 

Thats Garbage Stayman.

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...