Jump to content

2 over one respose and rebid


mikes616

Recommended Posts

we play 2 over one ( game forcing) and 1NT forcing; my partner opened with 1D; I am sitting with 20 hcp, 1D, 4C, 4H, 4S and open with 2C showing a MINIMUM opening hand ( and no fit with diamonds). My partner responds 2NT. I assume that she DID NOT have anoter 4 card suit to bid. We wound up at 4H and missed the slam ( I made a grand slam). She defended her bid ( she had 14 tcp) stating that I should have jumped shift rather than do the 2 over 1. I argued that my bid was fine and further, by her bidding 2NT she denied having 4 hearts which, in turn, messed up my bid. Who is correct???...Let me clarify a bit......My hand had all 4 aces plus 4 other points. The bidding went 1D, 2C, 2NT, 3H, 4H. I was afraid of a notrump contract with my singleton Ace , I couldn't depend on the reliability of her diamonds because of the better minor bid and my 3 bid was a desperate attempt to find some kind of suit contract.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi,

 

From your post:

 

You are in 3rd seat holding a hand with

a 4-4-1-4 shape and 20HCP.

 

The auction develops as followes

 

1D (1) - 2C (2)

2NT (3) - ... 4H (4)

 

(1) SAYC or 2/1 style

(2) game forcing

(3) bal. most likely showing also a min opener?

(4) end contract

 

A few comments

 

#0 There is no huge difference between SAYC and 2/1,

if the bidding starts with an opening in a minor

Of course you can add. conventional stuff after the

bidding begun with

1D - 2C

...

 

#1 your correct response is 1H, you only bid 2C,

if clubs are your longest suit

 

#2 For most, 2H over 2C would show reverse strength,

or at least add. strength and a 5-4 shape

In other words: 2NT usually does not deny a four

card major

If you have 5 clubs and 4 hearts, over 2NT you bid

3H, showing game forcing strength with 5-4

 

#4 Most likely there was still a way to reach the 6 level,

but since you did not give the complete seq., it is hard

to comment.

 

So all in all: Both of you were wrong.

- you did go wrong in the bidding

- your partners suggestion, that you should have make

a jump shift to show the game forcing strength is also

wrong.

 

Second: You should not try to focus on, who is to blame,

but you should try to discuss with partner, where it would

have been possible to do better.

 

With kind regards

Marlowe

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I responded 2 rather than 1 in order to show an opening hand+ and game forcing which I thought would be an expedient bid. I thought we could arrive at a suit contract later. Maybe a poor choice? I also thought that Aces and spaces could pose a problem especially with the 2NT response.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I responded 2 rather than 1 in order to show an opening hand+ and game forcing which I thought would be an expedient bid.  I thought we could arrive at a suit contract later.  Maybe a poor choice?  I also thought that Aces and spaces could pose a problem especially with the 2NT response.

Hi,

 

Not necessarrily a poor choice, but not standard.

 

The problem with 2C is, that you kill a complete level,

another one is, that auctions starting with

 

1D - 2C

 

are not easy, you will find lots of thread discussing hands

and bidding seq., which start in this fashion.

And due to the lack of a forcing NT response, lots of peoble

play is not 100% game forcing, but there are also lots of

peoble who play it.

 

In general a good strategy for responder is trying to keep

the bidding low, giving opener max. room to describe his

hand.

 

With kind regards

Marlowe

 

PS: Aces and Spaces is a terrible slogan.

Aces are brilliant cards, they get usually undervalued, i.e. be

happy, if you have a hand with Aces.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

When partner opens 1 of a minor and you hold a 4-card major, you should respond 1 of the major unless

 

A- you can force game AND

B- you have 5+ cards in the other minor

 

or

 

C- you qualify for a strong jump shift

 

If A and B are true, you should respond in the other minor and then bid the major at your next turn.

 

In this case, the above didn't apply, so you should have responded 1. Remember that a new suit response to 1 of a suit is forcing for one round. Thus you can bid as such with very strong hands as well as with 6-counts.

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...