MickyB Posted April 13, 2011 Report Share Posted April 13, 2011 I am posting this just for fun, I thought others might like to face the same problem as I did. I am very happy with the methods overall, so don't expect me to listen if you tell me that my system is awful! You play that a 1C opening is natural or 17-19 balanced and a 1D opening is natural or 11-13 balanced. In response to 1C, 1S shows either 4+diamonds [no major unless GF] or 3-3-3-4, over which a 1NT rebid shows 17-19. Let's say you are dealt a 4-4-1-4 hand with between 11 and 16 points. If you open 1C and partner bids 1S, you will have little choice but to rebid 2C. Partner will be aware that this just shows a minimum unbalanced hand, and will try to avoid passing with a doubleton club [3-3-5-2 being the only shape where she will have no choice]. She may, however, raise with three clubs and an invitational hand. So, my first question is - do you open 1C, or try to avoid this rebid problem and treat the hand as balanced? Does it depend on strength and suit quality? My second question - say your partner is a passed hand and you are dealt a 4-4-1-4 thirteen count. This opens up a third possible way to bid the hand [besides opening 1H or 1S] - are you tempted? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JLOGIC Posted April 13, 2011 Report Share Posted April 13, 2011 I would just open 1C, and yes I might be tempted to pass 1S opp a passed hand depending on my exact hand. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gnasher Posted April 13, 2011 Report Share Posted April 13, 2011 I'd treat this shape as balanced. With 11-13, I can't see much downside to that - you'll find a major-suit fit if you've got one, and if you don't you'll usually play in 1NT. If partner has diamonds, where won't be much competition from the opponents, so you should be able to avoid playing in a stupid fit. You may occasionally play in 1NT when you have a big club fit, but that must be rarer than the mess you seem to get into after 1C-1S. Opening 1NT on the 14-16 hands is a bit more dangerous, because you will miss game occasionally. However, it doesn't happen very often. I've been opening 1NT with all 4441 shapes in the 15-17 range for years, and the resulting bad boards have been very rare. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Free Posted April 13, 2011 Report Share Posted April 13, 2011 I'd also treat it as balanced. I have similar experiences like gnasher. In 3rd seat I might open 1M if my system can handle it. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Zelandakh Posted April 14, 2011 Report Share Posted April 14, 2011 I also treat 4=4=1=4 as balanced in the 12-17 range and think it is a good method. If you do it systemically it is helpful to have a transfer super-accept assigned to this shape. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Echognome Posted April 14, 2011 Report Share Posted April 14, 2011 What about just switching the NT ranges, so you can bid 1NT over 1♠? You will not have the same problem after a 1♦ opening. You will just have to open (41)=4=4 hands with 1♣. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
chasetb Posted April 14, 2011 Report Share Posted April 14, 2011 I also treat 4=4=1=4 as balanced in the 12-17 range and think it is a good method. If you do it systemically it is helpful to have a transfer super-accept assigned to this shape.You aren't supposed to open 1NT with an unbalanced hand (any hand with a singleton or void), but the ACBL will let you get away with it - as long as you can't find out about the singleton (whether it's Stayman or Jacoby transfers). I'm looking for where I read that, but I'm pretty sure it's a rule. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Echognome Posted April 14, 2011 Report Share Posted April 14, 2011 You aren't supposed to open 1NT with an unbalanced hand (any hand with a singleton or void), but the ACBL will let you get away with it - as long as you can't find out about the singleton (whether it's Stayman or Jacoby transfers). I'm looking for where I read that, but I'm pretty sure it's a rule.I don't believe what you read, but it doesn't matter, since Mike doesn't play in ACBL-land. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MickyB Posted April 14, 2011 Author Report Share Posted April 14, 2011 What about just switching the NT ranges, so you can bid 1NT over 1♠? You will not have the same problem after a 1♦ opening. You will just have to open (41)=4=4 hands with 1♣. Hey Matt. I have already switched the ranges once, I am much happier with them this way round, for a few reasons - We have enough room over 1D to do what we need to, and it is more preemptive on our weak NTs to bid 1D-P-1M instead of 1C-P-1R. 1D:1N leads to 2N or 3N wrong-sided opposite 17-19. 1C:1S gets the strong hand declaring and allows us to stop in 1N. I want to be able to pass a 1M response with a weak NT opposite a passed hand. It is simpler. You can play 1D:1M to show the other major to get 17-19 bal declaring, and you can play responder's flannery to lessen the pain from having to bid 1D:1S, 2D on a minimum (42)52, but 1D as nat/11-13 works just fine with every response as natural. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MickyB Posted April 14, 2011 Author Report Share Posted April 14, 2011 BTW, I don't think the problems on this sequence are as big as people are making out. Playing a style where the natural auction 1C:1S, 2C is routinely bid on five [perhaps because you play weak NT, or you just prefer 2C to 1N on a 5431] - The auction 1C:1S, 2C can be a 5-0 and is more likely to be a 5-1 than my auction is to be a 4-2Partner will respond 1S much more frequently than in my systemWhen they have this auction, they may be missing a 5-4 diamond fit, and possibly even a 5-4 heart fit. We won't have an eight-card fit in any suit. I think I just need to train partner to invite more soundly and to prefer 2NT to 3C when holding three-card support - I can remove to 3C on five cards if it looks right as she will be, at worst, 3-3-5-2. Still, the alternatives I suggested only have small downsides as well IMO, with the possible exception of opening 1NT. Hence the question. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dake50 Posted April 14, 2011 Report Share Posted April 14, 2011 Am I hearing this right?!I open 4441 as if balanced and do not inform my opponents that 4441 is systemically "balanced"? Or do I inform them that 80+years of 4441 is UN-balanced was wrong?? And because my partner need not know either, this is okay?Of course the justification is that 4441 is only 3% of shapes. Thus this category is just too small to much affect our system.The beechers/moaners are over-stuffed with themselves - not attempting to solve the 4441 problem without just relabeling it BAL.What a brilliance.! Just ignore a singleton and y'all bid much better. I DOUBT IT.! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
johnu Posted April 14, 2011 Report Share Posted April 14, 2011 I don't believe what you read, but it doesn't matter, since Mike doesn't play in ACBL-land. It may be a moot point, but you should believe Chasetb. I'm not associated with the ACBL rules machinery in any way or form, but it seems pretty clear to me. In the general convention chart definitions DEFINITIONS1. An opening suit bid or response is considered natural if in a minor itshows three or more cards in that suit and in a major it shows four or morecards in that suit. A no trump opening or overcall is natural if not unbalanced(generally, no singleton or void and only one or two doubletons). and in the Response section, 10. ALL CALLS AFTER A NATURAL NOTRUMP opening bid or directovercall, EXCEPT for natural notrump opening bids or overcalls with alower limit of fewer than 10 HCP or with a range of greater than 5 HCP(including those that have two non-consecutive ranges). See #7 underDISALLOWED 10) is the section which allows Stayman, Jacoby transfers, etc. By definition, having a singleton or void makes a hand unbalanced, so it's not a natural notrump bid or overcall. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Echognome Posted April 14, 2011 Report Share Posted April 14, 2011 Am I hearing this right?!I open 4441 as if balanced and do not inform my opponents that 4441 is systemically "balanced"? Or do I inform them that 80+years of 4441 is UN-balanced was wrong?? And because my partner need not know either, this is okay?Of course the justification is that 4441 is only 3% of shapes. Thus this category is just too small to much affect our system.The beechers/moaners are over-stuffed with themselves - not attempting to solve the 4441 problem without just relabeling it BAL.What a brilliance.! Just ignore a singleton and y'all bid much better. I DOUBT IT.!You clearly are not hearing this right. Mike has not mentioned anything at all about disclosure. He will of course inform the opponents with an announcement or alert as appropriate. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Echognome Posted April 14, 2011 Report Share Posted April 14, 2011 Hey Matt. I have already switched the ranges once, I am much happier with them this way round, for a few reasons - We have enough room over 1D to do what we need to, and it is more preemptive on our weak NTs to bid 1D-P-1M instead of 1C-P-1R. 1D:1N leads to 2N or 3N wrong-sided opposite 17-19. 1C:1S gets the strong hand declaring and allows us to stop in 1N. I want to be able to pass a 1M response with a weak NT opposite a passed hand. It is simpler. You can play 1D:1M to show the other major to get 17-19 bal declaring, and you can play responder's flannery to lessen the pain from having to bid 1D:1S, 2D on a minimum (42)52, but 1D as nat/11-13 works just fine with every response as natural.Fair enough Mike. I was just mentioning that I think that it solves this particular problem. I can certainly understand that there are other tradeoffs involved and you would prefer to deal with this problem. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JLOGIC Posted April 14, 2011 Report Share Posted April 14, 2011 With 11-13, I can't see much downside to that - you'll find a major-suit fit if you've got one, and if you don't you'll usually play in 1NT. You really don't see much downside? You find a major suit fit, and can never show your shortness. I forgot my goren, but I believe I singleton is worth like 2 more points than a doubleton with a fit also. That sucks when your hand is worth 16 in support of partner's major, but you can't show it. Or maybe you show your strength and then imply diamond length when you have shortness/ have to show the wrong shortness and partner can never work it out for slam purposes. It seems like a huge mess. I guess if partner is a passed hand, and you don't have to open 1N, opening 1D is fine, but otherwise count me out. I have always thought that doing things like opening 1N or 1D is making a mountain out of a molehill. How often will it actually go 1C p 1S p ? Often an opponent will bid something and you will be ok, or partner will have a 4+ card major (how often does partner have one, it's gottabe really likely). Even if the opps don't bid, or partner has a 4+ card major, he might be able to make a non 1S bid because he has club support. It seems like such a small %age of the time that we will have our "problem" auction that misdescribing right off the bat just in case it happens is really the wrong idea. And even when we do have the problem auction, who's to say we can't survive 1C 1S 2C? 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
blackshoe Posted April 14, 2011 Report Share Posted April 14, 2011 Johnu: do not overlook the word "generally" in the definition of natural nt that you quoted. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jallerton Posted April 14, 2011 Report Share Posted April 14, 2011 When they have this auction, they may be missing a 5-4 diamond fit, and possibly even a 5-4 heart fit. We won't have an eight-card fit in any suit. If the opponents have a 5-4 diamond fit or a 5-4 heart fit, then I assure you that your side will have at least an 8-card fit in another suit. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MickyB Posted April 14, 2011 Author Report Share Posted April 14, 2011 If the opponents have a 5-4 diamond fit or a 5-4 heart fit, then I assure you that your side will have at least an 8-card fit in another suit. Sorry, what I said was unclear. I was making the case that rebidding 2C on a 5431 playing natural methods put you in a worse position than rebidding 2C on a 4441 playing the methods described. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gnasher Posted April 14, 2011 Report Share Posted April 14, 2011 You really don't see much downside? You find a major suit fit, and can never show your shortness. I forgot my goren, but I believe I singleton is worth like 2 more points than a doubleton with a fit also. That sucks when your hand is worth 16 in support of partner's major, but you can't show it. Or maybe you show your strength and then imply diamond length when you have shortness/ have to show the wrong shortness and partner can never work it out for slam purposes. It seems like a huge mess. I guess if partner is a passed hand, and you don't have to open 1N, opening 1D is fine, but otherwise count me out. I didn't mean that we should play exactly the same methods on later rounds. If a 4414 shape is possble, then yes we should have a way to show it. After 1♦-1♠;2♠-2NT, it's not much of a loss to play 4♦ as a 4414 shape. Or you could do something more sophisticated and compress two hand-types into 1♦-1♠;2♠-2NT;3♣. I don't know what Goren said, but if you treat a a 4441 as being worth two points more than a 4432 with the same shape, you're overstating the value of the shortage. 4441 shapes are rarely as good as they look. That is especially true when it's a game or partscore deal, because we're likely to have to lose the lead a couple of times, and they will get several chances to play trumps. With a 4414 13-count, are you really recommending opening 1♣ and then raising 1M to the three-level? Even if you are, it's probably OK in MickyB's system to open 1♦ and then raise to the three-level on these hands, because he is probably using 1♦-1M;2NT as some kind of raise. If so, I expect he can fit in one extra hand-type without much pain. I have always thought that doing things like opening 1N or 1D is making a mountain out of a molehill. How often will it actually go 1C p 1S p ? Often an opponent will bid something and you will be ok, or partner will have a 4+ card major (how often does partner have one, it's gottabe really likely). Even if the opps don't bid, or partner has a 4+ card major, he might be able to make a non 1S bid because he has club support. It seems like such a small %age of the time that we will have our "problem" auction that misdescribing right off the bat just in case it happens is really the wrong idea. And even when we do have the problem auction, who's to say we can't survive 1C 1S 2C?We wouldn't be misdescribing. If our agreement was that 1♦ showed diamonds, any 11-13 balanced, or 11-13 4414, then a 1♦ opening on a 4414 12-count wouldn't be a misdescription. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JLOGIC Posted April 14, 2011 Report Share Posted April 14, 2011 Gnasher: You say: We wouldn't be misdescribing. If our agreement was that 1♦ showed diamonds, any 11-13 balanced, or 11-13 4414, then a 1♦ opening on a 4414 12-count wouldn't be a misdescription. However, OP says: So, my first question is - do you open 1C, or try to avoid this rebid problem and treat the hand as balanced? Unfortunately, I chose to answer the OP's question, where you, as so often, chose to change the rules of the question: I didn't mean that we should play exactly the same methods on later rounds. If a 4414 shape is possble, then yes we should have a way to show it. After 1♦-1♠;2♠-2NT, it's not much of a loss to play 4♦ as a 4414 shape. Or you could do something more sophisticated and compress two hand-types into 1♦-1♠;2♠-2NT;3♣. As far as I understand it, OP is asking whether we should open our systemic bid with 4414 for 4414 which is defined as 1C, or whether we should lie and say we are balanced. I did not understand it to mean should we change our system to include 4414 in our 1D openings and take it out of our 1C openings. Maybe I am being dense, but it seemed to me that OP was basically wondering if should make our systemic opener of 1C and risk the consequences of having to bid 1C 1S 2C, or if we would be better off treating the hand as balanced and risking the consequences of that. Part of the risk of treating the hand as balanced to me, is that you will not be able to show an unbalanced hand later! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MickyB Posted April 15, 2011 Author Report Share Posted April 15, 2011 it's probably OK in MickyB's system to open 1♦ and then raise to the three-level on these hands It feels wrong to describe a 4-4-1-4 as unbal with M+D Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gnasher Posted April 15, 2011 Report Share Posted April 15, 2011 Perhaps I misunderstood, but I assumed Mike was asking for suggestions as to how to handle these hands in his system. If the actual question was "I have a systemic way to bid 4414 13-counts. When I'm dealt a 4414 13-count, should I do what the system says, or something else?" then he already knows the answer. It feels wrong to describe a 4-4-1-4 as unbal with M+DMaybe I was wrong. What question were you actually asking? If your question was "Can you suggest a better way to handle 4414 shapes in my system?", then I am making two suggestions:(a) With 11-13 4414, open 1♦ and raise to 2M(b) With 11-13 4414, open 1♦ and raise to 2M unless you think you're too strong. Change the meaning of 1♦-1M;2NT from "unbal with M+D" to "unbal with M+D, or 4414 and too strong to raise to 2M" If your question was "I have a systemic way to bid 4414 13-counts. When I'm dealt a 4414 13-count, should I do what the system says, or something else?" then see above. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MickyB Posted April 15, 2011 Author Report Share Posted April 15, 2011 I think it's a bit much to expect me to know what question I was asking. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gnasher Posted April 15, 2011 Report Share Posted April 15, 2011 As for this: Unfortunately, I chose to answer the OP's question, where you, as so often, chose to change the rules of the question:When a group of people start talking about one thing, it's not uncommon for that to lead them to talk about one or more related but different matters. That's commonly called a "conversation" or "discussion", and is often regarded as both productive and interesting, especially by members of internet discussion forums. You can treat this forum as a sort of glorified quiz if you like, but I'm going to continue to use it to discuss bridge. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Zelandakh Posted April 16, 2011 Report Share Posted April 16, 2011 Micky, I have a related question to you. When you hold a 13 count 4441 hand, I assume you open 1D - what do you rebid when the response is 1NT? If the answer is 2D then you are no worse off rebidding 2C over the 1C - 1S auction. If the answer is Pass then perhaps you already treat a 1m444 hand as semi-balanced and doing the same with 4414 is not such a stretch. As an aside I think that opening 1C with the weak NT and 1D with the stronger hand is more harmonious precisely for this reason, that it facilitates easier auctions with the much more common weak NT hand type. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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