Jump to content

Compete in direct seat behind weak NT?


Recommended Posts

Relatively easy pass. Hate the methods: I think cappeletti is a terrible method and can only assume it's prevalence on BBO is due to it being very easy to remember.

 

I'd be doubling if partner wasn't passed, but with short majors and a passed hand, I don't see why I want to encourage either side to play in a major.

 

If LHO is 4=4 majors, then there is a good chance that he is going to have to pass if I pass, since he may be too weak to be able to bid over a 2 response to stayman, and he has to cater to that. In addition, he may have too much or be too balanced to use garbage stayman, or may not have it in his toolbox.

 

Meanwhile, if I double, most weak notrump players have a relatively easy way to show both majors and would do so with hands that would be passing otherwise.

 

If LHO holds a 5 card major, then nothing I do will keep him from bidding it, so I needn't worry about that.

 

Meanwhile, there is the risk that if I double partner will pull (presumably with a weak hand) into a 5-2 fit, getting us a minus score of at least 100 when the opps rate to do no better than +90 if I defend and diamonds behave. Alternatively LHO might run and partner might compete, say, in 2, again turning a small plus or minus into a slightly bigger one.

 

At imps, doubling is a little more attractive, since it is not impossible for us to collect 300 or even 500 if everything sits really well for us, and meantime turning -90 into -100 is immaterial, and other common poor outcomes only cost an imp or two.

 

However, I pass at all scoring because of my major holdings. I like double of a weak 1N to show 15+, and while the AKQxx suit is an upgradable defensive holding, having the other 5 hcp in my doubleton suits offsets that.

  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Pass.

 

I dont play Capp, but it is not as bad, as the post up to now imply.

Basically you need to decide, if you need a Penalty Double / Strength Showing

Double or not, I was involved in a thread with JLall, he said yes, I said no,

but this is a strategic decision, you make upfront.

 

Given the agreement set, you have to pass.

 

With kind regards

Marlowe

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Pass.

 

I dont play Capp, but it is not as bad, as the post up to now imply.

Basically you need to decide, if you need a Penalty Double / Strength Showing

Double or not, I was involved in a thread with JLall, he said yes, I said no,

but this is a strategic decision, you make upfront.

 

Given the agreement set, you have to pass.

 

With kind regards

Marlowe

what has the desirability of having a strength showing double (which imo one absolutely needs) got to do with whether capp is a good convention? I play at least 2 defences to weak nt that contain a strong double, and neither is capp, which I think is terrible: in that it offers no upside compared to other defences that are available and suffers a very bad downside (the 2 call is awful).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Borderline penalty double: I probably wouldn't do it, but also wouldn't criticize the bidding judgment of a player who did. No action other than double or pass need to be considered, regardless of your NT defense. CAPP is very simple and GCC legal, unlike many much superior methods; Multi-Landy, for example. This probably explains its popularity it North America: I don't understand why players from elsewhere would play it.
  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

what has the desirability of having a strength showing double (which imo one absolutely needs) got to do with whether capp is a good convention? I play at least 2 defences to weak nt that contain a strong double, and neither is capp, which I think is terrible: in that it offers no upside compared to other defences that are available and suffers a very bad downside (the 2 call is awful).

Ok - first we have most likely to clarify what Capp means, I usually I get it wrong,

from your comment I assume, Capp 2 is the single suiter, not 44 in the majors.

 

For me Capp goes something like

- 2C - majors

- 2D - single suited major

- 2H / 2S - 2-suited with major

- X power

 

of course, this could be reverse Cappelletti, I know Multi Landy as a name for this convention, but also

Hamilton (or Reverse Hamilton).

 

Regarding the strength showing double, I disagree, at least partially (creating an upper limit for the other actions),

but that is besides the point.

 

With kind regards

Marlowe

Link to comment
Share on other sites

For me Capp goes something like

As you write further, this is Multi Landy. Capp (aka Pottage and Hamilton) is:

 

2 - any one suit

2 - both majors

2M - major bid + a minor

X - power/penalty

 

Reversing the 2 and 2 overcalls from this gives Reverse Capp/Hamilton/Pottage. Capp is bad because you lose the ability to differentiate between major lengths with 2 over 2, while the chance to show diamonds at the 2 level is insufficient compensation.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

As you write further, this is Multi Landy. Capp (aka Pottage and Hamilton) is:

 

2 - any one suit

2 - both majors

2M - major bid + a minor

X - power/penalty

 

Reversing the 2 and 2 overcalls from this gives Reverse Capp/Hamilton/Pottage. Capp is bad because you lose the ability to differentiate between major lengths with 2 over 2, while the chance to show diamonds at the 2 level is insufficient compensation.

 

Depends on where you're from. In Seattle, Reverse Capp/Hamilton is understood to mean putting the M/m hands in the 2 bid, and making 2M natural.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...