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What does this auction mean ?


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More than a suggestion. A decision.

 

I have something vaguely similar over a balanced 1, the bidding going 1 - 1(balanced or minor) where a typical 12-14 opener bids 1NT. If instead he bids 2 (equally 2) he is saying that he is probably a 2353 sort of hand, and that fact that responder does not even have a 4 card major means he thinks it highly likely 2 will score better than 1NT.

 

In your situation, this seems identical. "Weak, think is better". I can't imagine a hand suggesting 5 as an alternative to 3NT, but maybe somebody can. However, if it is weak long diamonds then responder can do no other than pass. Not a "suggestion".

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That's exactly what it means, particularly when partner alerted 2N and is why I'm asking the question as to what it means without UI :)

I think the fact that no-one has seen this action over a natural 2N means that responder is probably entitled to base his next call on the assumption that there has been a misunderstanding.

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I think the fact that no-one has seen this action over a natural 2N means that responder is probably entitled to base his next call on the assumption that there has been a misunderstanding.

 

I've seen it a couple of times where the 1N is a sub minimum with 6 diamonds, I was trying to establish whether this was normal. I can completely understand it where the diamonds are not very good so you may not have the time to get them going in NT.

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I've seen it a couple of times where the 1N is a sub minimum with 6 diamonds, I was trying to establish whether this was normal. I can completely understand it where the diamonds are not very good so you may not have the time to get them going in NT.

 

Bidding 3 would seem to me be such a rare event, that I would think you would be "woken-up" by the 3 bid regardless of whether there was an alert or not.

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That's exactly what it means, particularly when partner alerted 2N and is why I'm asking the question as to what it means without UI :)

I once lost an appeal (as a player) in a case on this point. I was playing as a host with a pickup partner and we had agreed to play "Young Chelsea Standard" which includes four suit transfers. I alerted her 2NT and bid 3D after which she bid 3NT. Since she had a maximum NT with some diamond cards, I thought that Pass was not a logical alternative. The AC disagreed.

 

Certainly I think it's contradictory to imagine that 3D would be non-invitational. If I wasn't prepared to play in 2NT or to raise to 3NT, why did I open 1NT rather than 1D?

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Hi,

 

#1 first impulse, depending on your offshape opening style, long diamonds.

But this makes no real sense, if opener has a long weak suit, why should he

believe 3D plays better than 2NT, if the suit is brilliant, why not use the

suit in 2NT / 3NT.

#2 second impulse, it is accepting game, but showing worries about majors,

responder is short in the majors (lack of transfer / stayman), and if opener

is 44 / 54 in the minors (maybe even 5m4M), he can be sure about a minor suit

fit, although it is unclear, why he should want to go looking for the 11 trick

game, when 9 tricks may be there for taking.

 

#3 final impulse: shoot partner.

 

With kind regards

Marlowe

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something like KQ Axx QTxxxx KJ where opening 1n seemed better than starting with 1d and trying to figure out how many dia to rebid. does not wish to accept invite and feels 3d safer especially since responder rates t have at least 3 of them.

 

I think this hand is particularly ugly and not worth 15 but this was the hand type I'd first thought of.

 

The hand opposite was xxx, Qxxx, AQx, xxx and bid a making (when I failed to switch to a spade early from KJx) 3N. It openly admitted that it bid 3N to avoid playing in a potential 3-2 diamond fit, and had used the interpretation that 3 was 15-16 in the decision.

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I'd take it as a minimum showing 5+ and worried about at least one of the majors because of a probable worthless doubleton. It probably also carries some inference that aren't solid. With the opponents holding 8+ cards in a major, even with one stopper there, making NT might require enough running tricks once the stopper is removed.
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The sequence,with correctly understood bids,looks indeed an unusual one.Perhaps it expresses that 3D may be a better contract.It is suggestive of weakish 6 card suit.Playing,some years back, Precision I opened 1 Diamond in the 4Th seat and got a response of 2NT(11/12 balanced).When I signed of in 3D with a six carder weakish suit and only 11HCP, partner was impudent enough to bid 3NT which went three down.An international expert lady who was kibitzing taunted him, " your partner could have made 3D ,a cold contract ,easily".We got the zero we deserved.This deal looks somewhat similar to me.
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The times I have seen this the 1N opener has bid the diamonds because they felt panicked over bidding 1N with a 6 card suit and weak major stops. The solution is not to play bridge with people who open 1N with a 6 card suit and weak stops....put otherwise, opening 1N with 2 doubletons also qualifies for my blacklist.

:lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:

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something like KQ Axx QTxxxx KJ where opening 1n seemed better than starting with 1d and trying to figure out how many dia to rebid. does not wish to accept invite and feels 3d safer especially since responder rates t have at least 3 of them.

I am not accustomed to my partner choosing to open 1nt, and then realizing it was such a bad choice she steers out of notrump. However, there is a possibility that is reasonable: she resorted her hand after discovering her 3-3 in the red suits were all Diamonds. So, bidding 5 by Responder over 3 seems a logical alternative.

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I am not accustomed to my partner choosing to open 1nt, and then realizing it was such a bad choice she steers out of notrump. However, there is a possibility that is reasonable: she resorted her hand after discovering her 3-3 in the red suits were all Diamonds. So, bidding 5 by Responder over 3 seems a logical alternative.

 

I've done the mis-sort, the hand in question was AKxx QJx xx QJxx I realised this after partner transferred to spades over my 1N.

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Yes, occasionally you open 1NT on a six-card C or D suit, but it's not common (or shouldn't be).

 

3D is more of an IMPs bid than a MPs bid. It should show a minimum hand with a good 5-card D suit (maybe a six-bagger) and weakness for NT play. Maybe something like:

 

xx KQsx KQJTx Ax

 

You are apt to get murdered at NT here if partner has 8-9 and fewer than 4 spades (which is what he's shown). 3D ought to be pretty safe (partner rates to have a few D if he doesn't have a four-card major).

 

In IMPs, this bid makes a lot of sense; you want to go plus. At MPs, it's less useful, as NT scores better than diamonds.

 

Cheers,

mike

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Is opener known to open 1NT with six-card minors? With two non-stopping doubletons?

 

(caveat: don't really consider myself intermediate yet)

I'm assuming that the 1NT-2NT raise was well understood as a quantitative NT raise. Since opener opted for 1NT rather than a major, and since responder opted for a natural 2NT raise rather than Stayman (or Jacoby transfer), the balance of the majors is very likely with opponents. With weak holdings in one or both majors, maybe opener is worried about ending up in a NT contract and bid 1NT expecting/hoping that responder would use some suit-seeking device resulting in a comfortable sign-off (or, with a good fit, raise to game) in a suit. So I'd interpret 3 as a proposal to play in 3, and specifically, expressing an aversion to playing in 2NT relative to in 3. If responder has both majors stopped and a maximum for a 2NT invite, bid 3NT. If responder has 5 diamonds (or 4 diamonds with three honor points, maybe?) and ~3 or fewer losers in the majors, I guess maybe raise to 4? Something like x KJx Kxxxx Qxxx? This makes 5 opposite opener's Jxx Qx AQxxx AK, for example. Swap the K in with an x in and opener has the major stopped, and the partnership is likely to make 3NT.

 

None of this is based either on conventional knowledge or on specific experience. I'm just trying to guess based on what will avoid losing contracts and what might make game contracts. As always I'm happy there are more experienced/skilled players participating in these forums.

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Is opener known to open 1NT with six-card minors? With two non-stopping doubletons?

 

(caveat: don't really consider myself intermediate yet)

I'm assuming that the 1NT-2NT raise was well understood as a quantitative NT raise. Since opener opted for 1NT rather than a major, and since responder opted for a natural 2NT raise rather than Stayman (or Jacoby transfer), the balance of the majors is very likely with opponents. With weak holdings in one or both majors, maybe opener is worried about ending up in a NT contract and bid 1NT expecting/hoping that responder would use some suit-seeking device resulting in a comfortable sign-off (or, with a good fit, raise to game) in a suit. So I'd interpret 3 as a proposal to play in 3, and specifically, expressing an aversion to playing in 2NT relative to in 3. If responder has both majors stopped and a maximum for a 2NT invite, bid 3NT. If responder has 5 diamonds (or 4 diamonds with three honor points, maybe?) and ~3 or fewer losers in the majors, I guess maybe raise to 4? Something like x KJx Kxxxx Qxxx? This makes 5 opposite opener's Jxx Qx AQxxx AK, for example. Swap the K in with an x in and opener has the major stopped, and the partnership is likely to make 3NT.

 

None of this is based either on conventional knowledge or on specific experience. I'm just trying to guess based on what will avoid losing contracts and what might make game contracts. As always I'm happy there are more experienced/skilled players participating in these forums.

 

I gave +1 to your reply.

Not necessarily because I agree with every technical points you explained but because you expressed how you see it very well. With my own experience as a player, as a teacher and as a BBF member I can easily tell that you will have a bright future in this game.

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