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More on reverses


Phil

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I didn't want to threadjack Kenberg, so I started my own. Plus I put this in the 2/1 section where I think it belongs.

 

Note: In this auction:

 

1 - 1

2 - 2

...

 

It is also important for define opener's follow-ups, what they mean, and whether or not they are forcing. I would suggest the following, and would like others thoughts as well:

 

2N = Non-forcing, 17-18 or so.

 

3 = Non-forcing, 4-6

 

3 = Artificial force. IMO this needs some clarification as to what types of hands bid 3, and not another forcing call. I would also like to see some follow-ups as to what responder's obligations are. Initially, I would think it asks for a diamond stopper with great clubs and extras, but I can also see some good hands with a spade doubleton. I can hear Bluecalm laughing about this sequence from about 9,000 miles away :)

 

3 = 5-6 or 5-7, but good hearts. Non-forcing.

 

3 = 3415 / 3316 / minimum 3406. NF

 

3N = 19-20 (more?)

 

4 = forcing, lots of clubs and 0-1 spades. Heart length suspect.

 

4 = Void splinter, very good 3406.

 

4 = 5=6 or 5=7 with extras.

 

4 = singleton diamond, extras.

 

Thoughts?

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I didn't want to threadjack Kenberg, so I started my own. Plus I put this in the 2/1 section where I think it belongs.

 

Note: In this auction:

 

1 - 1

2 - 2

...

 

It is also important for define opener's follow-ups, what they mean, and whether or not they are forcing. I would suggest the following, and would like others thoughts as well:

 

2N = Non-forcing, 17-18 or so.

 

3 = Non-forcing, 4-6

 

3 = Artificial force. IMO this needs some clarification as to what types of hands bid 3, and not another forcing call. I would also like to see some follow-ups as to what responder's obligations are. Initially, I would think it asks for a diamond stopper with great clubs and extras, but I can also see some good hands with a spade doubleton. I can hear Bluecalm laughing about this sequence from about 9,000 miles away :)

 

3 = 5-6 or 5-7, but good hearts. Non-forcing.

 

3 = 3415 / 3316 / minimum 3406. NF

 

3N = 19-20 (more?)

 

4 = forcing, lots of clubs and 0-1 spades. Heart length suspect.

 

4 = Void splinter, very good 3406.

 

4 = 5=6 or 5=7 with extras.

 

4 = singleton diamond, extras.

 

Thoughts?

I usually use 2S as a weak relay to 2NT, later you can pass 2NT or sign off at 3 levels (of course opener can bid naturally with gf hands after 2S).

2NT would be gf with spades. This treatment is very simple.

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Only real problem I have is with the 3 rebid in your scheme. It maybe should be treated as forcing ---backing up to opening 1H with hands of minimum reverse strength which would really want to stop short of game if pard is minimum with 3 hearts. Then you wouldn't have need to jump to 4H.
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I think there's a case for some of your NF continuations to be forcing. I agree with aguahombre about 3; if I have a very minimum 5-6 I'd just bid 3 here with the idea of getting out lower on a possible misfit. It also seems to me that 3 should maybe be forcing -- even if both hands are relatively minimum you'll often have game once a true spade fit is located, and playing this as forcing gives you a lot of space to cuebid.

 

The reverse auction which has always seemed more problematic to me is 1-1-2-2N. The question is how many clubs 3 by opener shows, and which calls by opener (if any) are forcing.

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FWIW

 

2s shows 5+s and less than 10

 

rebids by opener:

 

1) Bidding the 4th suit(always forcing). If a minor, it shows 5440 distribution. If a major, it must be artificial.

 

2) raise of partner's suit (if 5 carder) is invite

3) 2nt shows a stopper in unbid suit.

4) 3nt to play.

5) rebid of first suit nf. Does not promise 6 example: x...AKQx..jxx....AKJ9x

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I think my style is quite different from most people's here. I would be happy to force to game with 3 spades here, so 3s can be a doubleton for me (NF). I guess I also don't usually bid 2s on any old 5-card suit (a 5-3 fit can still be found next round).

 

I could see both ways on 3h being forcing or NF, but I play it as forcing where I've discussed it.

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As to the 3, I think it must be a. I am now committing us to game and b. I don't have the cards to make one of the more closely defined bids.

 

Suppose, after the 2 rebid, you want to force to game. 3 can be passed, so says more or less everyone, and you have defined 3 as passable. Bidding 3 is out if you are not 6-5. You have other defined bids but, for example, if 4 shows a void you had better have a void. We may well come to 3 as a "what else?" bid.

 

When a lot of bids are closely defined it is always handy to have a call that says sorry, I don't have the cards for one of those agreements that we have.

 

The problem of course is that responder's hand is not yet very well-defined. He will have to do his best. For this reason it is useful to build enough flexibility into the rest of the structure so that the 3 bid doesn't come up very often.

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Its not clear to me what you intended the 2 bid to mean.

Wayne, if you reference Mike's primer, the most common use of 2 is forcing and natural (5+) but ambiguous.

Thanks

 

I wasn't sure if you were building on that or a NF variation or Kenberg's 2 negative

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I didn't want to threadjack Kenberg, so I started my own. Plus I put this in the 2/1 section where I think it belongs.

 

Note: In this auction:

 

1 - 1

2 - 2

...

 

It is also important for define opener's follow-ups, what they mean, and whether or not they are forcing. I would suggest the following, and would like others thoughts as well:

 

2N = Non-forcing, 17-18 or so.

 

3 = Non-forcing, 4-6

 

3 = Artificial force. IMO this needs some clarification as to what types of hands bid 3, and not another forcing call. I would also like to see some follow-ups as to what responder's obligations are. Initially, I would think it asks for a diamond stopper with great clubs and extras, but I can also see some good hands with a spade doubleton. I can hear Bluecalm laughing about this sequence from about 9,000 miles away :P

 

3 = 5-6 or 5-7, but good hearts. Non-forcing.

 

3 = 3415 / 3316 / minimum 3406. NF

 

3N = 19-20 (more?)

 

4 = forcing, lots of clubs and 0-1 spades. Heart length suspect.

 

4 = Void splinter, very good 3406.

 

4 = 5=6 or 5=7 with extras.

 

4 = singleton diamond, extras. 

 

Thoughts?

I agree with most of this.

 

I think that 2N and 3 of opener's minor have to be played as natural and nf.

 

3 of the other minor has to be forcing, just on bridge logic.....yes, there may be 0=4=5=4 hands on which one reverses then wants to bid 3 in a desperate attempt to get out....but for those, one should either risk 2 rather than 2 (and if one plays meckwell, one has some additional comfort in this approach) or one should rebid 2N and pray.

 

What it means is another issue entirely. I suppose it could be something like x AKQx xxx AKQxx, and since that hand seems otherwise unbiddable, I think that this is the best use for it......it could also include xx AKQx xx AKQxx, and this may make untangling a spade fit problematic....but no method is perfect and when the hands are awkward, we have to accept that we will sometimes miss par.

 

However, I feel that 3 has to be forcing.

 

We presumably reversed because we had a strong hand with 3 spades and no convenient raise. Our hand got better when partner rebid spades...we have a better fit than we could count on when we decided to reverse. A method that permits stopping on a dime in 3 seems to me to be aiming at a tiny and limited value target, while using 3 as trump agreement opposite an unlimited hand strikes me as very useful.

 

The alternative is to devour a level of bidding space when we hold, say, AQx AKxx x AKQxx...while doing so, on that example, will likely cost little, if anything, as a general rule I think we should try to conserve space on power auctions. Now, if I felt that there was a good argument for being able to stop in precisely 3, I'd change my views...but as said earlier, I see that as a low-utility idea.

 

As for rebid of opener's 2nd suit, I agree with the non-forcing idea, and I agree, also, with 3N being a BIG notrump rebid, typically 5431 but could be 5422 with, for example, AQ in the 3rd suit.

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I have mentioned that 3, forcing or not, is under discussion with my partner right now. For the moment, we have settled on NF.

 

Suppose, for discussion, we play 3 as forcing. Steve Robinson suggests that it show two, not three, spades. I think it might be a good idea, especially if it shows something like Qx and denies the ability of opener to bid 3NT. After the raise to 3, responder may be in a position to bid 3NT. Maybe warily, maybe happily, but he would have a clear expectation that opener is 2-2 in his short suits. This would take some of the load off of the somewhat vague 3 rebid over 2. When opener actually has three spades he has options. A direct bid of 4 over 2 or a slower route of 3 and then a correction to 4. One could define what the difference is. Something about suit quality, probably.

 

Among other things, there will be times when responder will elect to play 4 in a 5-2 fit. When the fourth suit is unstopped and the spades are strong, this could be right since 3NT is unplayable and in 5 you are losing tricks 1 and 2. Sometimes you have the rest, sometimes you don't.

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