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Minor Suit Transfers over 2N openings and rebids


steve2005

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Over strong 2N openings and rebids these items which am considering changing in a 2/1 system. Currently:

 

3 - Puppet Stayman, 3 - Minor Suit Stayman, 5 - Super Gerber

 

4 - transfer to and a least a mild slam try [4N-negative possibly to play, 4 good hand for slam (4 is now RKC) other bids are cuebids]

 

4 - transfer to and a least a mild slam try [4N-negative possibly to play, 5 good hand for slam, possible to go higher which forces slam]

 

Want to use:

 

3N - transfer to and a least a mild slam try [4N-negative possibly to play, 4 good hand for slam (4 is now RKC) other bids are cuebids]

 

4 - transfer to remains same

 

Now if you just want to sign-off in 3N you have to use Puppet Stayman.

 

4 - would have no meaning, so is available for use

 

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

 

Now the disadvantages are:

 

You might forget convention and just bid 3N

 

Your giving information away by bidding Puppet Stayman unnecessarily, which could occur if 22(45) no 3-card major or (4333) and no ruffing potential.

 

Advantages:

 

investigating slams done lower

 

possible use for 4

 

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

 

Thoughts?

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I also use what Helene wrote. 2NT - 4 is range ask Baron, freeing up 4NT as a puppet to 5 (and hence 5 is a puppet to 5). That essentially means that every response from 4 to 5 is a transfer in addition to 3, 3 and 3. The 3 club transfer has all of the 1-suited slam hands plus 5-5 minors. (31)(45) hands are handled using the specialist sequences 2NT - 3; 3 - 4M so they do not need to be included in 3.
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Best scheme I've seen so far for minors is Forrester's one

 

2NT ..??

 

3 = transfer to 3NT. To play or slammish.

4m = slam try in linked major

4M = to play (hand hogging mechanism)

 

Now

 

2NT 3

3NT ??

 

4 = 5-4 slammish. Opener bids 4 fit (cues ensue), 4M club fit + cue, 4NT misfit!!!, 5m fit no slam interest.

4 = 4-5 slammish. Opener bids 4M fit in the linked minor, 4NT misfit, 5m fit no slam interest.

4M = slammish 6+ in linked minor. Opener can bid 4NT as RKCB (teams) or bad hand for slam/to play (pairs).

4NT = slammish 55 minors, but not forcing.

5 = slammish 55 minors, forcing. Opener bids 5 fit looking for 7, 5M club fit looking for grand slam, 5NT = yucky hand in context.

 

You can add also 44 hands stuff:

 

2NT 3NT = baron

 

This is an anti-mnemonic convention, though... someone is bound to forget it at some stage.

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Why do you find it better to bid 2NT - 3; 3NT - 4NT as a slam try with 5-5 minors rather than 2NT - 3; 4 or 2NT - 3; 3NT - 4? Or 2NT - 3; 3NT - 4M rather than 2NT - 3; 4/2NT - 3; 3NT - 4 or 2NT - 4 for that matter? It is true that you are 2 steps lower on the 5-4 minor hands but that comes at the cost of not being able to find a 5-3 major suit fit. And that is without weighting the issue of not being able to have the auction 2NT - 3NT. Perhaps there is more to it but I am unconvinced this is "the best scheme" from this snippet.
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That is the scheme as I learned it from Forrester's "TRS" pamphlet (a semi-forcing pass system). If you can improve on it without messing up stuff, I'd be delighted :)

Well I have posted the basics of my scheme a few times - you will have to tell me whether it is an improvement for you! B-) There was a thread a while back in which Adam, CY and a few others also posted their 2NT response structures, so if you can find that one you can compare a whole bunch of possibilities all at once.

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I like 3 "please bid 3NT", over which 4m is the longer or better minor in a two-suited hand, and 4M is single-suited in the corresponding minor. Direct 3NT is Baron, but in my experience it never comes up, so you can use it for whatever you want; even to ly with no minor-suit interest.
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For what it is worth...

Here's a structure from the May 2006 ACBL Bulletin :

 

2NT - 3S! = relay to 3NT

3NT - ?? then:

........ Pass = to play, ( Needed since direct 3N is major 44 )

........ 4C = slam try in clubs

........ 4D = slam try in diam

........ 4H = splinter, both minors

........ 4S = splinter, both minors

........ 4N = invitational to 6N ( both minors , no shortness?? 4/4, 4/5 or 5/4 )

........ 5N = forcing to 6N, invitational to 7N

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Here's another idea:

 

3 shows one or both minors, slam interest.

 

Opener's usual responses are to indicate which minor he would prefer if Responder has 5-5 in the minors. Opener bids 3NT with diamond preference or 4 with club preference.

 

If Opener prefers diamonds (bids 3NT), Responder can bid 4 with the club one-suiter. With either the diamond one-suiter or the minor two-suiter, diamonds are agreed. Responder can bid 4 as kickback, 5 as a mild non-descript invite, or can make a shortness bid (4, 4NT for hearts, or 5 for clubs) as another slam try.

 

If Responder hears 3NT (diamond preference) but has 2-2-4-5, he can bid 4, which does not agree diamonds, with clubs still in the picture.

 

If Opener, instead, bids 4 (prefers clubs), 4 agrees clubs and is Kickback, 4 is a shortness try, 4NT is shortness in hearts, and 5 is shortness in diamonds. There is no generic try.

 

What can go wrong?

 

1. Opener has 4522 or 5422? Yeah, right.

 

2. Responder has 2254 and Opener prefers clubs? Responder pre-anticipates this problem and bids instead 4 directly over 2NT with 2254.

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A reasonably simple scheme, that keeps 2N-3N as natural: 3S=C or C+D, 4C=D

 

2N-3S-...

... 3N: not interested

... ... 4C: C+D, not interested in cues

... ... ... 4D: still not interested

... ... ... ... 4H: RKC for D

... ... ... higher: interested, direct RKC response for D

... ... 4D: RKC for C

... ... 4M: (21)55, (30)55 splinter, interested in a cue in the other major

... 4C: interested

... ... 4D: RKC

... ... higher: cue

... higher: cue

 

2N-4C-...

... 4D: not interested

... ... 4H: RKC

... higher: direct RKC response for D (or cue, depending on your preferred style)

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Best scheme I've seen so far for minors is Forrester's one

 

2NT ..??

 

3 = transfer to 3NT. To play or slammish.

4m = slam try in linked major

4M = to play (hand hogging mechanism)

 

Now

 

2NT 3

3NT ??

 

....

 

My guess is using this approach when the bidding starts

 

2NT 3

 

that I will have no intention of bidding past 3NT at least 9 times out of 10.

 

A few times times the bidding will continue

 

2NT 3 (DBL)

p 3NT

 

Opening leader leads a spade, 3NT is down.

In the other room opening leader led a heart after 2NT - 3NT and 3NT made

 

Next time the bidding goes

 

2NT 3

3NT pass

 

Opening leader had a close decision between the majors. He led a heart and 3NT went down

In the other room opening leader led a spade and the contract made.

 

Is it all worthwhile?

 

Rainer Herrmann

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  • 3 weeks later...

An alternative is:

  • Keep 3nt to play
  • Use 4/ as major suit transfers
  • Use 4/ as minor suit transfers

Continuation after minor suit transfer:

  • 2nt-4 then 4 interest; 4nt no interest, no fit; 5 no interest, but fit
  • 2nt-4 then 4nt no interest, no fit; 5 interest; 5 no interest, but fit

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I use:

 

3 = Stayman (not puppet). May be bid with a minor single-suiter (bids 4m next or 4 with diamonds over a 3NT rebid, where 3NT shows both majors).

3red = Transfer

3 = Asks for a 5 card suit, slam interest (usually balanced). If opener responds 3NT (no five card suit) then you bid 4 card suits up the line ala Baron.

3NT = To play

4m = Both minors, slam interest with better/longer suit

4M = Natural slam try, forcing

4N = Quantitative

5m = Natural slam try, non-forcing

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could you clarify the 3 description

 

Sure, here's the full scheme after 3:

 

2NT-3;

3 = No four card major

...3M = Smolen

...3NT = To play

...4m = Natural slam try, does not promise a major

3M = 4 card major, not the other major

...Other major = Slam try in opener's major

...3NT = To play

...4m = Natural slam try, does not promise the other major

...4M = To play

3NT = 4-4 majors

...4 = Natural slam try

...4red = Puppet to 4M

...4 = Slam try in diamonds

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