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Inverted minors (EBU)


VixTD

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Quoted from post 3 is their agreement:

"Undiscussed."

 

The comment about 15+ is one possible meaning. I do not see why we assume this one without further evidence.

It is also the only meaning I've ever seen played in a weak no trump acol context in nearly 40 years of bridge unless another relay bid is being used. In EBU land unless some other relay is used (we use 2) I would suggest that 99% of people play it as some form of 15+ and you'd assume 15+ bal if you hadn't agreed something else.

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I disagree with this, for many people 2N is 16-17 invitational over the weak 2 raise and 15-19 (or 17-19) GF opposite the inverted one assuming a weak no trump so what's the problem.

That's what I said (or intended): The minimum for 2NT is lower over inverted raise than over a weak raise.

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That's what I said (or intended): The minimum for 2NT is lower over inverted raise than over a weak raise.

Yes it is, but for many people the maximum is lower over the weak raise. If 2N was what you bid on any balanced hand shy of a 2N opener (which is not an uncommon way of playing it), and opener actually has 19 (where he'd bid 3N over the weak raise), they may have missed 7/N so is bidding 6N suggested ? Also I have known 3N as 15-16 and 2N as 17-19 pretty commonly too, in which case 2N is better than over the weak 2.

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I don't think discussing the merits of various meanings for 2NT helps us make a ruling when the offending pair has no agreed meaning to the bid. Or, for that matter, when they do.

It sort of does, and this is an interesting question.

 

I think you need to ask W what he thought E's range for 2N over his inverted 2 was, although it may be undiscussed, W would have a vision in his head for what he was bidding 6N opposite.

 

If he said 17-19 (where it's better than over the weak bid), that's very different to if he says 15-16 (where it's weaker), or if he said 15-19 (where it's pretty random whether it's weaker or stronger).

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1: I'm never, ever bidding 3 (which many people play as minimum ish even though I agree 2N is GF and this is not best), 3 is the obvious start particularly if 2 denies 4M if you're getting scientific.

Fine with me. I was basically arguing that "not-blasting" was an LA. How you chose to "not blast" is another discussion.

 

2: Choosing to blast 6N at pairs is utterly normal rather than pinpointing the lead.

Blasting 6NT may be utterly normal -I like blasting myself- but that is not the criterion. The criterion is whether there is an LA. I would say that in the choice: "Blast vs Science" science usually is an LA. This is no acception.

 

3: If you decide you want to bid 3 and you don't know what 3 would mean over this (diamond stop no spade stop or spade card looking for club slam ?) in an unpracticed partnership, you may want to avoid the murk for reasons unconnected with the infraction.

Which is why I would have bid 3: It's not as murky as 3. :P

 

But again, "may want to avoid the murk" is fine, but not when you have UI that says that you will have murk. And in this case, there may be a little bit of murk unconnected with the infraction, but there is an awful lot more murk connected to the infraction.

 

Rik

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Heh, OT, but last night I had J 8xx AJTxx Kxxx unfavourable at IMPs, playing K/S with invm Limit+. I chose not to bid 2 because of exactly this discussion - I would want to bid 3 over 2NT 15-17 not GF. As it turns out it would have worked better as partner had a 3 response to 1, and 6 was cold (and easy to find after 1-2, but we managed to survive it after the opponents decided to push us in spades, and eventually bid 5-over-5.
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To be more precise, I think most would consider both inviting and blasting to be LAs. The UI makes blasting more likely to be right, which is why it's not allowed.

 

I thought the UI made the grand more likely and responder giving up on that with all those controls to be doing their duty albeit without the hindsight. Wrong thinking but I have no ethical concerns and don't tend to punish in such circumstances.

 

With those controls I think responder did their duty giving up on the grand in the context of how I interpret the strength of the 2nt bid absent the UI. With the UI I would have serious reservations on a delicate auction that got to a making grand and these birds don't deserve to lose every decision based on hindsighting the result.

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It sort of does, and this is an interesting question.

 

I think you need to ask W what he thought E's range for 2N over his inverted 2 was, although it may be undiscussed, W would have a vision in his head for what he was bidding 6N opposite.

 

If he said 17-19 (where it's better than over the weak bid), that's very different to if he says 15-16 (where it's weaker), or if he said 15-19 (where it's pretty random whether it's weaker or stronger).

Asking West is one thing. People speculating here without anything from West is another thing altogether.

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Undiscussed.

 

I would imagine opposite a standard 2 bid it should show 17-19 hcp balanced, suggesting playing in no trumps. Opposite an inverted raise it could be a fair bit weaker, perhaps 15+. Their opening 1NT is 12-14, 1NT rebid is 15-17, 2NT (non-jump) rebid is 15+ GF after a change of suit.

But it is non the less important. If it really is 17-19 HCP I don't have many problems with 6NT, but you could poll.

Alerting 2 BTW is not obliged in all countries.

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Asking West is one thing. People speculating here without anything from West is another thing altogether.

True, but when there is not enough information to make a sensible ruling, there is nothing wrong with people's suggesting what they would do under whatever set of circumstances seems to them to be likely.

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I think West is using UI in two different ways: he's playing his partner for a stronger hand than would be shown if 2 had been alerted, and he's making a call that his partner can't misconstrue. I suspect 3 (forcing after a 2NT rebid) is a logical alternative to bidding 6NT, and if he bid that he might play there.

It seems that the adjustment to 3C+4 is so automatic that I am surprised that anybody would suggest anything else. I would also give a PP for the 6NT bid, depending on West's experience.

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  • 3 weeks later...

It is also the only meaning I've ever seen played in a weak no trump acol context in nearly 40 years of bridge unless another relay bid is being used. In EBU land unless some other relay is used (we use 2) I would suggest that 99% of people play it as some form of 15+ and you'd assume 15+ bal if you hadn't agreed something else.

I really am beginning to worry about this sort of post, which reminds me of the "I have been playing bridge in England for well over 20 years and have never played against anyone who responds 2 to Stayman with both majors". Are you really telling me, Cyberyeti, that in 40 years of playing bridge, whenever your opponents are playing inverted minors you have always asked them how they play a 2NT rebid?

 

This thread is riddled with people who assume everyone else plays their way!

 

After an inverted minor, I do not know how most people play it, and I suspect nor do most people here: people take these things up from various sources and either play continuations as the source does, or work out continuations themselves, or base their rebids on other experiences or readings. I very much doubt there is consistency.

 

On the other hand, I have been playing straight Acol with various partners for 40+ years, and I think the quoted standard rebids are wrong. Standard is to rebid 2NT with 17-18, 3NT with 19, or 19-20. Admittedly, some poorer players get confused with other rebids and they do rebid 2NT with 15-16.

 

I feel the 6NT bid was based on UI, in fact I think it was unauthorised panic. But we really need to find out how these people play it. How did they take it up? Did they learn it from someone else? Why do they play 2 as forcing to 3, in fact, are you quite sure they do?

 

It seems that the adjustment to 3C+4 is so automatic that I am surprised that anybody would suggest anything else. I would also give a PP for the 6NT bid, depending on West's experience.

Works for me if 3 is forcing. But, I don't play it as forcing myself.

 

I appreciate that it does not affect anything how I play it, except that I doubt I am really in a minority of one, so when I play it 2 is forcing to 2NT, 3 or game. A 2NT rebid shows stoppers in all suits and minimum, typically 11-13. A 3 rebid shows an unbalanced minimum. New suits show stoppers and may be minimum or not, ie 2/M rebids are only forcing to 2NT.

 

Playing with myself I would bid 3NT over 2NT. If I felt really optimistic I might try 3.

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