Phil Posted September 2, 2010 Report Share Posted September 2, 2010 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? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Fluffy Posted September 2, 2010 Report Share Posted September 2, 2010 I am not familiar with this methods, I use 2♠ as GF relay asking opener to pattern out. 2NT with the weak hands. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
junyi_zhu Posted September 2, 2010 Report Share Posted September 2, 2010 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. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
aguahombre Posted September 2, 2010 Report Share Posted September 2, 2010 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. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
awm Posted September 2, 2010 Report Share Posted September 2, 2010 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. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mike777 Posted September 2, 2010 Report Share Posted September 2, 2010 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 invite3) 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 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
karlson Posted September 2, 2010 Report Share Posted September 2, 2010 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. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Cascade Posted September 2, 2010 Report Share Posted September 2, 2010 Its not clear to me what you intended the 2♠ bid to mean. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Phil Posted September 2, 2010 Author Report Share Posted September 2, 2010 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. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kenberg Posted September 2, 2010 Report Share Posted September 2, 2010 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. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Cascade Posted September 3, 2010 Report Share Posted September 3, 2010 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 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
aguahombre Posted September 3, 2010 Report Share Posted September 3, 2010 Is there an extra "e" in the thread title? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
pooltuna Posted September 3, 2010 Report Share Posted September 3, 2010 Is there an extra "e" in the thread title? yes there is and clearly opener's partner is a peon. :P Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mikeh Posted September 3, 2010 Report Share Posted September 3, 2010 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. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kenberg Posted September 3, 2010 Report Share Posted September 3, 2010 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. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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