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Match-point decision 1


Hanoi5

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3 am I missing something?

Maybe that a point-counter would bid 4.

 

If you play strong NT's, 3 is fine.

 

However, if 3 can contain 15-17 bal., I'd bid 4.

Point counter? What, 3+18=21, so pass?

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3 am I missing something?

Maybe that a point-counter would bid 4.

 

If you play strong NT's, 3 is fine.

 

However, if 3 can contain 15-17 bal., I'd bid 4.

Point counter? What, 3+18=21, so pass?

I assume, that this time you are only pretending to be silly?

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3 am I missing something?

Maybe that a point-counter would bid 4.

 

If you play strong NT's, 3 is fine.

 

However, if 3 can contain 15-17 bal., I'd bid 4.

Point counter? What, 3+18=21, so pass?

I assume, that this time you are only pretending to be silly?

Hyperbole, again. But, since partner will stretch to keep the auction alive with a King, the "point" is that point-counters should bid 3, because 18+8=26, and Responder raises with 8-9 from a 6-9 range, so how would point counters bid this differently?

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3 am I missing something?

Maybe that a point-counter would bid 4.

 

If you play strong NT's, 3 is fine.

 

However, if 3 can contain 15-17 bal., I'd bid 4.

Point counter? What, 3+18=21, so pass?

I assume, that this time you are only pretending to be silly?

Hyperbole, again. But, since partner will stretch to keep the auction alive with a King, the "point" is that point-counters should bid 3, because 18+8=26, and Responder raises with 8-9 from a 6-9 range, so how would point counters bid this differently?

But they will bid 4.

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3 am I missing something?

Maybe that a point-counter would bid 4.

 

If you play strong NT's, 3 is fine.

 

However, if 3 can contain 15-17 bal., I'd bid 4.

But the weak NT style with which I am familiar (Kokish gets some credit for writing about this if he didn't come up with it) makes this an even clearer 3 call.

 

When playing weak notrump it is common, and mandatory in the 'kokish' approach' to require 4 cards for a single raise.. and the single raise shows either 15-17 balanced or an unbalanced hand, the idea being that an unbalanced 12 count with 4 card support has approximately the same playing value as a balanced 15 count with 4 card support... one generally plays a relay thereafter to clarify hand-type. In turn, this makes the jump raise very powerful... a control rich 17 count or better.... partner will rarely pass the jump raise.

 

In fact, if anything, I'd downgrade to 2, in this style, before I'd bid game... but I'd be comfortable with 3... as I am in the OP.

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3 am I missing something?

Maybe that a point-counter would bid 4.

 

If you play strong NT's, 3 is fine.

 

However, if 3 can contain 15-17 bal., I'd bid 4.

4 is really bad no matter what. And I think Ken's point is that only point MIScounters would bid 4, since if partner is a minimum response we don't have enough points for game.

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3 am I missing something?

Maybe that a point-counter would bid 4.

 

If you play strong NT's, 3 is fine.

 

However, if 3 can contain 15-17 bal., I'd bid 4.

But the weak NT style with which I am familiar (Kokish gets some credit for writing about this if he didn't come up with it) makes this an even clearer 3 call.

 

When playing weak notrump it is common, and mandatory in the 'kokish' approach' to require 4 cards for a single raise.. and the single raise shows either 15-17 balanced or an unbalanced hand, the idea being that an unbalanced 12 count with 4 card support has approximately the same playing value as a balanced 15 count with 4 card support... one generally plays a relay thereafter to clarify hand-type. In turn, this makes the jump raise very powerful... a control rich 17 count or better.... partner will rarely pass the jump raise.

 

In fact, if anything, I'd downgrade to 2, in this style, before I'd bid game... but I'd be comfortable with 3... as I am in the OP.

I'm surprised that you say it's common to require 4card support for a single raise to 2. I'd say that it's rather uncommon based on my experience.

 

Anyway, for me raising with 3-card unbalanced minimum would be default. Only if my hand had a very clear orientation towards something else, I would not raise 1 to 2 with 3 unbal.

 

So for me 3 is nowhere near as strong as you suggest.

 

But I agree that the actual hand is a 3 bid.

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3 am I missing something?

Maybe that a point-counter would bid 4.

 

If you play strong NT's, 3 is fine.

 

However, if 3 can contain 15-17 bal., I'd bid 4.

But the weak NT style with which I am familiar (Kokish gets some credit for writing about this if he didn't come up with it) makes this an even clearer 3 call.

 

When playing weak notrump it is common, and mandatory in the 'kokish' approach' to require 4 cards for a single raise.. and the single raise shows either 15-17 balanced or an unbalanced hand, the idea being that an unbalanced 12 count with 4 card support has approximately the same playing value as a balanced 15 count with 4 card support... one generally plays a relay thereafter to clarify hand-type. In turn, this makes the jump raise very powerful... a control rich 17 count or better.... partner will rarely pass the jump raise.

 

In fact, if anything, I'd downgrade to 2, in this style, before I'd bid game... but I'd be comfortable with 3... as I am in the OP.

I'm surprised that you say it's common to require 4card support for a single raise to 2. I'd say that it's rather uncommon based on my experience.

 

Anyway, for me raising with 3-card unbalanced minimum would be default. Only if my hand had a very clear orientation towards something else, I would not raise 1 to 2 with 3 unbal.

 

So for me 3 is nowhere near as strong as you suggest.

 

But I agree that the actual hand is a 3 bid.

I should have stressed that my opinion on weak notrump-style major raises was based on my experience with a particular school of thought... my first attempt at a post was explicit in that regard, and then when I changed some comments, I left that bit out. I fully understand that in many parts of the world and other parts of NA, the approach may be fundamentally different.

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