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(uncontested)

 

1D 1H

1S 3C

 

What is 3C?

 

Thanks

 

Eagles

 

I will be interested in seeing what others think. I imagine a case can be made for various treatments. As a default I like to agree that any non-reverse jump to the 3 level by responder is invitational He could have started with a 2 rebid (I assume 2 followed by 3 is natural and forcing) or he could have started by bidding 2 over 1 (not denying a major as far as I am concerned). So it seems to me that the strong hands can be handled w/o a jump. Meaning, I would think, it is either invitational or weak. I prefer invit, but I am open to opinions. I imagine it shows six clubs.

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DNE without agreement. I have played all of the following:

 

1. Splinter

 

2. Two-suiter, invitational

 

3. Two-suiter, forcing

 

My preference is for 2. Although it has the lowest frequency, it has the highest utility, since the other hands can be handled in other ways.

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You need to decide whether 2 is GF (I think most people do this) or merely invitational as we play.

 

You also need to work out the difference between 1-1-1-2N and 1-1-1-2-2/-2N if you play it as invitational.

 

It may also make a difference how you want to bid this if partner has basically guaranteed 5 diamonds and can't have a weak no trump.

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In my (SAYC based) usage it shows an opening hand, likely with 4-4 hearts and clubs, and denies four spades. He may or may not have a fifth heart (but denies six).

 

Once he has responded 1 over 1, failing to jump on the second round would deny more than about 10 points.

 

(I dismiss the possibility of "fourth suit forcing" because anyone who uses that convention is almost certainly playing 2/1 rather than SAYC, and therefore would not have jumped, period.)

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In my (SAYC based) usage it shows an opening hand, likely with 4-4 hearts and clubs, and denies four spades. He may or may not have a fifth heart (but denies six).

 

Once he has responded 1 over 1, failing to jump on the second round would deny more than about 10 points.

 

(I dismiss the possibility of "fourth suit forcing" because anyone who uses that convention is almost certainly playing 2/1 rather than SAYC, and therefore would not have jumped, period.)

 

Why aren't you bidding NT if 4-4 in / or is this only with xxxx ?

 

4SF is used in all sorts of systems as it allows you not to consume needless space by jumping any time you hold a good hand.

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I like the four-hearts-long-clubs-weak-hand answer.

There are bids to show invitational or forcing hands

either in hearts, NT-ish, or hearts-and-clubs.

 

But what if you have xx, Qxxx, x, KTxxxx?

 

I find it useful to treat the auctions

1D - 1M; 1N - 3C

and 1C - 1M; 1N - 3D

to be similar 4M, 6(+)m weak hands.

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About SAYC and artificial bids:

There is a big difference here between 1-1-1NT-2 and 1-1-1-2 in SAYC, Again going to the booklet:

 

However, after a 1NT rebid by opener, bids of a new suit at the next higher level are non-forcing.

I assume they mean, even though they do not say it, that these new suit bids at the two level are non-forcing if they are not reverses.

 

My policy, if a pick-up wants to play SAYC, is to clarify whether he includes nmf as part of SAYC. Officially it is not, see above, but many think that it is. But fsf is part of SAYC and is both artificial and forcing.

 

At any rate, I can see 1-1-1NT-3 being played as weak if 2 is nmf. The 1NT limits the hand and you may well want to escape. I play it that way with a partner, the problem is that it never comes up. Think about it. We have a club fit. He has a minimal opener. I have a weak hand. Why aren't the opponents in this auction? Usually they are. Whatever the merits of being able to get out in 3, the auction will seldom go that peacefully.

 

 

Back to 1-1-1-3

If it is played as an invit, I was thinking 6-4. The OP used it with 5-5. My thinking was that maybe we don't have a fit anywhere, and if this is so at least I might be able to cope in a six card trump suit.

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Glad I don't play it then, everybody I've met (and noticed) in the UK playing SA seems to use it as part of the system with the exception of 1-1-1-1

Heh. SAYC and SA are different systems (I suppose you could call SAYC a "child" of SA), but see below.

 

From page 4 of the ACBL SAYC System Booklet:

I sit corrected.

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Glad I don't play it then, everybody I've met (and noticed) in the UK playing SA seems to use it as part of the system with the exception of 1-1-1-1

 

"SA" (Standard American) is not "SAYC" (Standard American Yellow Card).

 

SA is like saying "Acol" -- four or five card majors? What's your 2-bid structure? How do you respond to Multi 2D? etc. SA is a very-much-up-to-the-partnership collection of gadgets and styles they choose to suit themselves, with some of the few constraints being that it's typically a 5-card major, strong NT "system".

 

SAYC on the other hand is a very well-defined set of conventions and treatments. It was developed (to the best of my knowledge) by the ACBL to allow partnerships to play a certain set of conventions (5-card major, strong NT based) with a minimum of gadgets (weak twos, Jacoby, Stayman, etc.) that allows for very little deviation (example: Want to play 2D opening as something other than weak? No can do. Bergen raises? Sorry.). See the card at http://web2.acbl.org/documentlibrary/play/sayc_card.pdf , or do a search for the SAYC system explanation in .pdf.

 

This allows for a new partnership to sit down and play together with less chance of misunderstanding, and helps speed up certain games at tournaments, especially when only SAYC is allowed. It's called SAYellowCard because the convention card is supposed to be printed on yellow stock to make it easy to know your opps are playing SAYC and not some "complicated" system.

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Why aren't you bidding NT if 4-4 in / or is this only with xxxx ?

I don't think anyone has said what's in opener's hand. I'd guess exactly 4 spades, 2 or fewer hearts, and diamonds at least as long as clubs, but that still leaves a lot of wiggle room. If opener has one or no hearts (he could easily be 4=0=5=4) notrump could be a disaster.

 

4SF is used in all sorts of systems as it allows you not to consume needless space by jumping any time you hold a good hand.

That's the 2/1 philosophy, but I've never been impressed by it. Better to know your strength within a narrow range early on. I've played 2/1 and had disaster after disaster, because it makes just about every exploratory auction forcing to game.

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I don't think anyone has said what's in opener's hand. I'd guess exactly 4 spades, 2 or fewer hearts, and diamonds at least as long as clubs, but that still leaves a lot of wiggle room. If opener has one or no hearts (he could easily be 4=0=5=4) notrump could be a disaster.

 

He's allowed to bid clubs over your NT.

 

That's the 2/1 philosophy, but I've never been impressed by it. Better to know your strength within a narrow range early on. I've played 2/1 and had disaster after disaster, because it makes just about every exploratory auction forcing to game.

 

Forget 2/1, Acol uses it and so does pretty much everything else, it also doesn't have to be game forcing if you agree it not to be as we do at the 2 level.

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In poat number 9 OP says waht was in his hand. A spade void and

 

-

AK763

954

K9543

 

I agree that this is a tough hand to bid if 3 is unavailable for it.

 

2 as forcing (it always is) but not game forcing would be useful. Which I think is the way it is in SAYC.

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