kgr Posted June 2, 2011 Report Share Posted June 2, 2011 In another topic it was discussed if 1♠ is forcing(1♦)-1♥-(pass)-1♠And for a poster this depended on playing transfer advances. How does that work (can you still bid 1♠ nat)?Note:I play transfer only to 'between suits' (..called Rubens advances I think):(1♣)-1♥-(pass)-?-2♣=xfer ♦-2♦=xfer ♥ (like a cue)other bids are natural Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gwnn Posted June 2, 2011 Report Share Posted June 2, 2011 That's how I played them, too. 1♠ and 1NT were natural. I think we played new suits (when bid naturally*) as forcing, but it was not a consequence of Rubens advances. *e.g. (1♦)-1♥-p-2♣ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
whereagles Posted June 2, 2011 Report Share Posted June 2, 2011 Rubens' advances start at the cue-bid and go up to support -1. Example: 1♣ 1♥ pass ?? 2♣ = diamonds. Strenght goes from a decent 7 or so up to infinity. Usually denies 3-card heart support.2♦ = good heart raise (i.e. the same as what the cue would show playing normal methods) Only these two bids are rotated. Other bids are natural: 1♠ = natural. NF/F1 and 4+/5+ cards depending on agreements1NT = natural, the usual 8-12 hcp or so2♠ = natural, whatever you agreed with pard (weak, strong, fit bid, etc..) Another example: 1♣ 1♠ pass ?? 2♣ = diamonds2♦ = hearts2♥ = spadesRest = natural The advances can apply after a constructive overcall at ANY LEVEL. Actually, the higher the overcall is, the more useful the advances are. Example: 3♦ 3♠ pass ?? 4♦ = hearts. Usually either a lot of hearts and weakish hand or a side suit and support of spades4♥ = decent spade raise, slammish4♠ = enough for game, no desire to go further Other bids (3NT, 4♣, etc) are natural. In competition (i.e. RHO butts-in), you can play that advances are on if the step corresponding to the cue is vacant: 1♣ 1♥ 1♠ ?? transfers ON, but 1♣ 1♥ 2♣ ?? transfers go OFF and normal methods apply. Finally, I recommend you to ONLY play these methods with a good pard, who is willing to study them. Cases where pard forgets the transfers are overly abundant (speaking from experience here.. lol). Especially if the transfers start higher than the 2-level. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
fromageGB Posted June 2, 2011 Report Share Posted June 2, 2011 1♣ 1♥ 1♠ ?? transfers ON, but 1♣ 1♥ 2♣ ?? transfers go OFF and normal methods apply.I play advancer transfers too, but with my transfer partner we play these situations as if we "forget about" the opening bid, and use transfers as if partner had opened and there was an overcall. Transfers up to overcaller's suit. So after 1♣ 1♥ 2♣ ??X = ♦♦ = good heart support raise to the 2 level♥ = poor raise to 2♠ = natural. Generally a transfer to the opening suit is inviting partner to bid NT if he has opener's suit guarded. So we "remember" it then. B-) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Phil Posted June 2, 2011 Report Share Posted June 2, 2011 Transfer advances can be problematic. Here's a possible scenario for this auction: 1♠; natural (forcing or not, your choice)1N = clubs2♣ = 'transfer' to the cue bid; thus a limit raise2♦ = constructive raise2♥ = garbage raise In this setup, you give up a natural 1N. You can switch things around, but you are going to give up something. You can throw out the garbage raise, and make 2♦ a limit raise. 1♠ / 1N and 2♣ can be natural, or 1♠ = NT, 1N = clubs and 2♣ = spades. After all of these gyrations I think its better not to play transfers. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
whereagles Posted June 4, 2011 Report Share Posted June 4, 2011 Phil, NT bids are usually kept of the scheme. That makes it a lot more playable. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
whereagles Posted June 4, 2011 Report Share Posted June 4, 2011 I play advancer transfers too, but with my transfer partner we play these situations as if we "forget about" the opening bid, and use transfers as if partner had opened and there was an overcall. Transfers up to overcaller's suit. So after 1♣ 1♥ 2♣ ??X = ♦♦ = good heart support raise to the 2 level♥ = poor raise to 2♠ = natural. Generally a transfer to the opening suit is inviting partner to bid NT if he has opener's suit guarded. So we "remember" it then. B-) I once tried a scheme similar to the one you mentioned, i.e. "pretend partner opened and there was an overcall" but gave up on it because it was way too hard to remember all the stuff. Tecnically it had merit, but it was really too hard in practice to keep it in our RAM :P Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
fromageGB Posted June 5, 2011 Report Share Posted June 5, 2011 I once tried a scheme similar to the one you mentioned, i.e. "pretend partner opened and there was an overcall" but gave up on it because it was way too hard to remember all the stuff. Tecnically it had merit, but it was really too hard in practice to keep it in our RAM :PThat's strange, because I am not good at remembering things, can't get my head round complicated sequences, but tranfers are easy. All our bids in competition are transfers at low levels, so it would be difficult to remember anything else :transfer walsh with no competition - from 1♦ to 1♠ inclusivestill transfer walsh after a one level overcall - from double to 1NT (the latter only over spades)transfers after a NT overcall - from double to one under openertransfers after our major opening has been overcalled - from double to one under openertransfers after a jump overcall, from double to one under openerrubens transfer advances after our overcall and third seat pass, from their suit to one under partner'stransfer advances after our overcall and third seat bid, from double to one under partner'sI guess if you use transfers in all competitive situations it makes it easier to remember. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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