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Not in a 2/1 context, holding a hand with enough HCP to respond at the 2-level, with 5 clubs, 4 in one of the majors and 2-2 in the other suits. Partner opens 1, is it correct to respond 2 or 1M?

To save time on the followup:

if 2 how do we later find a 4-4 major fit if opener rebids 2NT?

if 1M how do we later untangle the suit lengths to show clubs are in fact longer than the major?

 

Thanks.

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The answer to this depends to some extent on the strength of your no trump and 2/1s.

 

A very normal way of handling this in weak no trump acol is to play the 2/1 strong enough that any balanced hand too strong for a weak no trump is sufficient to force to game opposite one, so the 2N rebid is forcing and you can simply bid 3 with the 2425. This fits with a philosophy of only bid 2 over 1 with a 2425 if you're prepared to bid 2 over a 2 rebid, otherwise respond 1.

 

It's more awkward if you play a strong no trump and I don't profess any particular expertise in that area.

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Not in a 2/1 context, holding a hand with enough HCP to respond at the 2-level, with 5 clubs, 4 in one of the majors and 2-2 in the other suits. Partner opens 1, is it correct to respond 2 or 1M?

To save time on the followup:

if 2 how do we later find a 4-4 major fit if opener rebids 2NT?

if 1M how do we later untangle the suit lengths to show clubs are in fact longer than the major?

 

Thanks.

 

Taking into acount the principle of preparedness, it is good practice to always bid your longest suit first. With longer and enough strength (...) bid 2 and then over 2NT 3. So you need at least 12H to do so.

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In a not 2/1 environment where 2/1 shows 11+ it's better to show the Major at the one level. Usually you'll give up on the minor in such a situation unless your partner bids it.

 

If you still decide to bid 2 it is important that opener doesn't bid NT with a 4-card Major. Playing 2/1 FG I usually convene with partners that 1-2-2 shows at least 5 diamonds and doesn't deny Majors, bidding a Major shows 4 cards and not 5 diamonds and Nt denies holding a 4-card Major.

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Thanks everyone.

 

Hanoi, how can opener show a stronger than minimum hand with a four card major like that? Say the bidding is 1-2 and opener has a 16+ hand with four spades. I'm guessing 2 is non-forcing, so 3? And then how can responder know if 3NT is the place to be?

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Thanks everyone.

 

Hanoi, how can opener show a stronger than minimum hand with a four card major like that? Say the bidding is 1-2 and opener has a 16+ hand with four spades. I'm guessing 2 is non-forcing, so 3? And then how can responder know if 3NT is the place to be?

No, after responder has bid at the 2-level a new suit by opener is forcing.

1-2

2

is even a reverse so that is certainly forcing, and in most (all?) modern bidding systems it is even a game force.

 

With a minimum and 45, opener rebids 2. Whether this is forcing or not is a question of agreement (in SAYC, it is forcing), but in any case it doesn't promise extra values.

1-2

2-2

now responder shows the spades, because opener could still have four spades and just not enough values to reverse. 2 here is certainly forcing, and it is a game force for most partnerships.

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