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Your bid playing SA 2/1


  

39 members have voted

  1. 1. Your bid?



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I think that there are two reasonable calls here: 1NT and 1

 

1NT gets the shape and range right, but has the obvious risk of wrongsiding the contract.

If you can't stand 1NT, I think that a 1 overcall with the strong 4 baggers is reasonable.

 

X strikes me as very bad. You have no rebid if partner shows spades.

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1NT. The upsides to 1NT for me are:

 

(1) you put your points and shape on the table

 

(2) you enable partner to bid his 5+ spade suit

 

(3) you enable partner to bid his 5+ diamond suit

 

(4) you occasionally block LHO's spade suit from being introduced

 

The 1 alternative suffers in these respects because:

 

(1) you do not put the points on the table and have a difficult time ever doing it later

 

(2) partner's 5+ spade suit may be hard for him to show if LHO bids (and he might bury it if he has three heats)

 

(3) partner is much less likely to show diamonds

 

(4) you end up actually improving LHO's ability to show spades

 

The downside to 1NT is the dubious club stopper, but that does not trouble me too much.

 

An alternative is a 1 overcall. This has some appeal because:

 

(1) 1 overcalls of 1 tend to be stronger than major overcalls, which is a correct read by partner

 

(2) A diamond "fit" from partner is less likely to induce not showing a major

 

(3) 1 does not help spade definition by LHO as much as 1

 

(4) 1 might get out of the way if the opponents want to play in hearts

 

Thus, IMO, 1NT>1>1

 

X and P are not worth mentioning, IMO.

 

 

 

 

 

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I also choose 1NT. (Added: I see KR also got his 1NT in while i was typoing this, and checking the votes it seems to be a strong favorite.) If partner has as little as Qx in clubs we are ok and,at least woth that holding, it doesn't matter which side it is played from. For that matter, of W holds Axx in clubs it will be far from clear to him that he should lay down the ace, and for that matter maybe he shouldn't. We will play in spades if partner has five, we will play in hearts if partner has four along with some values, and if I play in NT it is likely to go fine.

 

So 1NT for me.

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A confident 1NT. If we end up playing in NT, I expect a spade lead, so who cares about the club stopper?

 

The interesting part comes when partner shows 5 spades and invites or bids 3NT. I think I will correct to 4.

 

Rik

 

Actually, if partner is a thinking partner, we will have more discussion here:

 

If he invites 3NT by bidding 2NT, we can now bid 3 as "I was kidding about that club stopper."

 

If he wants to bid 3NT as choice, he has two routes:

 

1. 3NT (I have clubs stopped too)

 

2. 3 (were you being funny?)

 

 

 

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Good feedback, thanks. My personal preference would've also been 1NT, GIB holding this hand bid 1 which was interesting because I didn't know it even considers four-card overcalls. I wondered if I'm missing anything, I'd expect even simulation-logic to show 1NT to be better.
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What range do most people play (1)-1/-P-1-P-1N/2N as ?

About 10-12/13-15 I would think. It depends a little what range the overcall showed and therefore what the minimum for partner's advance is. In any case they should show a better than minimum overcall unless you are doing something clever (which you can but most don't).

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About 10-12/13-15 I would think. It depends a little what range the overcall showed and therefore what the minimum for partner's advance is. In any case they should show a better than minimum overcall unless you are doing something clever (which you can but most don't).

 

Interesting, I'd certainly have treated the 2N rebid as stronger than that, but not sure by how much. I'm probably influenced by overcalling rather than doubling on some pretty good hands.

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I wouldn't dare to bid 1 if I know my partner would be forced to jump to 2NT with 13 balanced in response :)

Once again,

I would think. It depends a little what range the overcall showed and therefore what the minimum for partner's advance is.

If your bottom range for 1 is different then your NT ranges adjust to that. The reason for CY's question was precisely that he does play different ranges for these calls.

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So responder's only forcing bid is cue? Do people play that?

 

If you play 1 non-forcing, then you have a cue or a jump shift (which is usually a fit jump) as forcing. Of course, even though 1 is non-forcing it doesn't mean that overcaller would drop it with an opening hand (even a light opening hand).

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