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Six-level decision


gnasher

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I have already suggested an alternative. 2 was hearts and a minor. 3 of a minor by us should be 4+ of that minor and 4+ spades.

So what do I do with my near solid 6 card minor and no spade fit? 3 shows more diamonds than this and usually no spade fit. Most hands with / can bid 4, this hand has insufficient diamonds.

 

Is 2N in the frame as a spade raise as the first action ? but with 3 meaning what it did, I'm not unhappy with it.

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So what do I do with my near solid 6 card minor and no spade fit? 3 shows more diamonds than this and usually no spade fit. Most hands with / can bid 4, this hand has insufficient diamonds.

 

Is 2N in the frame as a spade raise as the first action ? but with 3 meaning what it did, I'm not unhappy with it.

 

In an unscientific study(sample size too small) fewer than 20% of boards are played in a minor. Does anyone have a large study on this?

 

So what do I do with my near solid 6 card minor and no spade fit?

 

Under my methods these hands are unbiddable. Assuming you have 6 card minor with 100 honors, these hands usually belong in notrumps. Don't think any system has a way to stop at 3, when that is the last makeable contract.

 

2NT can be artificial showing an minor. With a spade raise show the 4+ card side suit. With a 3-card spade raise double first.

 

1 - (2) - X

or

1 - (2) - X

 

These auctions shouldn't be a traditional negative double. It's not asking opener to rebid a minor. It's mostly shows a 3 card raise or some strong hand with no other convenient bid. Opener would still rebid the minor at the 3 level with 5-4.

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When do we get the full hand?

You don't, because it's not relevant. We'd had a misunderstanding about the 3 - partner thought it was a weak raise or a game-force (with 3 showing exactly a limit raise). If he had known I had a limit raise, he would have made a slam try over 5, or even just bid slam. As I said earlier, this is just a problem that I found interesting. There is no interesting story to go with it.

 

In case you're wondering how we could get such an everyday sequence wrong, it's because we play two different transfer structures in competitive sequences, and one of us forgot which one applied here. Maybe we shouldn't play so much stuff.

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So what do I do with my near solid 6 card minor and no spade fit? 3♦ shows more diamonds than this and usually no spade fit. Most hands with ♦/♠ can bid 4♦, this hand has insufficient diamonds.

 

 

Under my methods these hands are unbiddable. Assuming you have 6 card minor with 100 honors, these hands usually belong in notrumps. Don't think any system has a way to stop at 3, when that is the last makeable contract.

 

Solid suits are not so much as a problem, AKJxxx/AQJxxx where you do somewhat care about partner's holding are. Not suggesting playing 3, but I care when partner has KQ10xx if his side suit is K/Qxxx in my minor or the other one.

 

If I have x, xxxx, AKJxxx, Ax and partner has AKJxxx, x, Qxxx, xx or AKJxxx, x, xx, Qxxx on the first I want to be in 5 or 6 diamonds, on the second I probably want to be in 4 (not sure I can stop in 3), how do I tell them apart if I can't bid my suit.

 

2NT can be artificial showing an minor. With a spade raise show the 4+ card side suit. With a 3-card spade raise double first.

 

This is revolting, what if I don't have a side suit, 4333 or my side suit is xxxx.

1 - (2) - X

or

1 - (2) - X

 

These auctions shouldn't be a traditional negative double. It's not asking opener to rebid a minor. It's mostly shows a 3 card raise or some strong hand with no other convenient bid. Opener would still rebid the minor at the 3 level with 5-4.

1-2-X is often played in the UK as ability to penalise at least one and often 2 of opps suits.

 

1-2-X we certainly play as a standard negative double.

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You don't, because it's not relevant. We'd had a misunderstanding about the 3 - partner thought it was a weak raise or a game-force (with 3 showing exactly a limit raise). If he had known I had a limit raise, he would have made a slam try over 5, or even just bid slam. As I said earlier, this is just a problem that I found interesting. There is no interesting story to go with it.

 

In case you're wondering how we could get such an everyday sequence wrong, it's because we play two different transfer structures in competitive sequences, and one of us forgot which one applied here. Maybe we shouldn't play so much stuff.

 

Not seeing the hand is fine, but in that case I think you should post some conclusive remarks. :)

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If I have x, xxxx, AKJxxx, Ax and partner has AKJxxx, x, Qxxx, xx or AKJxxx, x, xx, Qxxx on the first I want to be in 5 or 6 diamonds, on the second I probably want to be in 4♠ (not sure I can stop in 3), how do I tell them apart if I can't bid my suit.

 

Big hands aren't the problem and they occur with low frequency and it is possible to find a massive fit. It is the weaker ones which are hard to bid.

x, xxxx, AQJxxx, Qx. If this hand doesn't fit well with opener's, let the opponents play the 3 level. There isn't sufficient bidding room for us to be certain. We could pass first and compete if they try to stop in 3.

x, xxxx, Qx, AQJxxx. With this hand we are just frozen out of the auction. It is unlikely we belong on the 4 level in clubs.

 

This is revolting, what if I don't have a side suit, 4333 or my side suit is xxxx.

 

Flat hands play poorly. Treat 4333 as 3-card support.

 

 

1-2-X we certainly play as a standard negative double.

 

I have never seen this sequence written up completely. What exactly does a standard negative double look like?

What's the ideal pattern and HCP strength?

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If I have x, xxxx, AKJxxx, Ax and partner has AKJxxx, x, Qxxx, xx or AKJxxx, x, xx, Qxxx on the first I want to be in 5 or 6 diamonds, on the second I probably want to be in 4 (not sure I can stop in 3), how do I tell them apart if I can't bid my suit.

 

Big hands aren't the problem and they occur with low frequency and it is possible to find a massive fit
.

 

A 12 count is hardly massive, and what do you propose to do over 4 if you have say 3 small hearts and haven't yet shown your diamonds ?

 

It is the weaker ones which are hard to bid.

x, xxxx, AQJxxx, Qx. If this hand doesn't fit well with opener's, let the opponents play the 3 level. There isn't sufficient bidding room for us to be certain. We could pass first and compete if they try to stop in 3.

x, xxxx, Qx, AQJxxx. With this hand we are just frozen out of the auction. It is unlikely we belong on the 4 level in clubs.

 

You just bid 3m and pass 3, not ideal, but allows you to bid the other hands.

 

This is revolting, what if I don't have a side suit, 4333 or my side suit is xxxx.

 

Flat hands play poorly. Treat 4333 as 3-card support.

 

OK, but what am I supposed to do with Kxxx, Axx, xxxx, Ax

 

1-2-X we certainly play as a standard negative double.

 

I have never seen this sequence written up completely. What exactly does a standard negative double look like?

What's the ideal pattern and HCP strength?

2344 10 count maybe ? or possibly 22(45)

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Regardless of system there will be hands which can't be handled.

---------------------------

Flat hands play poorly. Treat 4333 as 3-card support.

OK, but what am I supposed to do with Kxxx, Axx, xxxx, Ax

 

This is a good hand. Force to 4 with this hand.

 

Kxxx, Qxx, QJxx, KJ

 

This is a problem hand. I have no ideal how many tricks can be made in spades.

And it may be dependent on opponents' patterns.

------------------------

I have never seen this sequence written up completely. What exactly does a standard negative double look like?

What's the ideal pattern and HCP strength?

 

2344 10 count maybe ? or possibly 22(45)

 

Yes, but how does opener rebid with a 5233 minimum?

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Playing 12-14 NT.

A 5233 minimum would look like

QJ752, A3, KQ4, QJ6

 

Also do you ever open 1NT with 5 card majors?

We open 1N with any 12-14 balanced hand including all 5332s unless we're prepared to bid as if we had a 6th card in a major (AKQJx, xxx, Qxx, xx I might open 1 but it's once in a blue moon).

 

The point is that the t/o X shows that the partnership has game values if I'm balanced, so I bid a GF and not necessarily balanced 2N and let partner describe his hand. If we have a combined 25 count and no game then I'm going down.

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