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Weak NT openings


dickiegera

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I would reply "your job is to serve all your members".

They might counter by saying that they offer Midchart and Super Chart for the other members and that you are welcome to set up your own club and run tournaments using those if you can find enough like-minded players to make it financially viable.

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Ssems this discussion crossed outside the "Simple Rulings" criteria long ago!
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  • 4 weeks later...
Partner and I once played around with opening 1NT with 9-15 HCP only in 3rd seat and only when we were white and opponents red and have had good success with it...We just bid naturally...(we pre-alerted )...I think this was legal and playing 1NT white is usually a top in Matchpoint, even if going down 1
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It's legal if and only if (under the General Convention Chart) you played no conventions (no Stayman, no transfers, no Lebensohl if they intervene, no stolen bid doubles, etc.) after the opening bid. The restriction does not apply under the Mid or Super charts.

 

If you're not in ACBL's jurisdiction, consult your local system regulations for legality.

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Precisely. We bid 100 percent natural

 

Somebody on the Bridgewinners site said complied with the no conventions rule by using 2 to show 3+ clubs, 2 to show 3+ diamonds, and opener would rebid a 4 card major. :rolleyes: The net result is effectively Stayman. Legal or not?

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Somebody on the Bridgewinners site said complied with the no conventions rule by using 2 to show 3+ clubs, 2 to show 3+ diamonds, and opener would rebid a 4 card major. :rolleyes: The net result is effectively Stayman. Legal or not?

Probably not - since the call is forcing (asking for partner's 4-card major)

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Somebody on the Bridgewinners site said complied with the no conventions rule by using 2 to show 3+ clubs, 2 to show 3+ diamonds, and opener would rebid a 4 card major. :rolleyes: The net result is effectively Stayman. Legal or not?

 

Probably not - since the call is forcing (asking for partner's 4-card major)

 

The fundamental (origional) definition of a non-conventional bid is that the bidder is willing to play with that bid as his contract, i.e. his partner must be permitted (by agreements) to pass.

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The fundamental (origional) definition of a non-conventional bid is that the bidder is willing to play with that bid as his contract, i.e. his partner must be permitted (by agreements) to pass.

So that excludes all approach-forcing systems.

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Somebody on the Bridgewinners site said complied with the no conventions rule by using 2 to show 3+ clubs, 2 to show 3+ diamonds, and opener would rebid a 4 card major. :rolleyes: The net result is effectively Stayman. Legal or not?

A similar argument was used by Culbertson back in the day to explain why Stayman was a useless convention that noone should use. If you make it so that Responder is limited to at most invite strength (which would always be the case for 3rd seat openings) Opener can even pass with a minimum and no 4 card major, which might even end up being an advantage over Stayman on some hands.

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The fundamental (origional) definition of a non-conventional bid is that the bidder is willing to play with that bid as his contract, i.e. his partner must be permitted (by agreements) to pass.

 

So that excludes all approach-forcing systems.

 

Look up the definitions in the laws:

 

Bid : An undertaking to win at least a specified number of odd tricks (tricks in excess of six) in a specified denomination.

 

This definition has remained essentially unchanged for at least 85 years!

 

Note that nothing here makes the use of conventional bids (i.e. bids with meanings other than that described in definitions) as such illegal, but they are not "natural".

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Look up the definitions in the laws:

 

Bid :  An undertaking to win at least a specified number of odd tricks  (tricks in excess of six) in a specified denomination.

 

This definition has remained essentially unchanged for at least 85 years!

And it is not the same as your earlier assertion:

 

The fundamental (origional) definition of a non-conventional bid is that the bidder is willing to play with that bid as his contract, i.e. his partner must be permitted (by agreements) to pass.

 

This would mean that a forcing change of suit is conventional, for which I doubt you would get much support.

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Some people want to play the weak and/or wide ranging only in 3rd seat where game forcing is off the table. And if you said the nt opener passed with 5 or 6 in the minor, and hence a known 8+ card fit, that seems a reasonable non-forcing treatment.
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A call can be both natural and forcing. For instance, in the standard, uncontested auction 1-1X responder's bid is natural (it shows at least 4 cards in the suit) and unlimited in strength (so even if opener is light, game and even slam could be possible).

 

Perhaps rather than "the bidder is willing to play with that bid as the contract", a better description would be "the bidder is willing to play in a contract with that denomination". In the case of a bid by a player whose hand is limited, they're offering that bid as the contract.

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Maybe we should look at the 2017 definition?

 

Artificial call

 

1. A bid, double, or redouble that conveys information (not being information taken for granted by players generally) other than (or in addition to) a willingness to play in the denomination named or last

named.

 

2. A pass that promises more than a specified amount of strength.

 

3. A pass that promises or denies values other than in the last suit named.

--------

 

Under this definition then it is clear that 2 or 2 showing the suit (but asking partner to bid a 4-card major) is an artificial call (unless it is agreed to make the call as well without a 4-card Major).

 

It would also appear that any asking call is NOT artificial - as it does not convey any information - it asks for it. Does this make Moscito a natural system?

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"Not being information taken for granted by players generally" is interesting. Suppose, rather than the original problem here, the bidders have agreed that a 2 response to 1NT (assume a 'normal' NT to avoid the 'illegal system' question) is Stayman. The information conveyed by a Stayman 2 (that responder is looking for a 4-4 major suit fit) is certainly "taken for granted by players generally". So it would seem that a Stayman 2 bid is not artificial. Law of Unintended Consequences, anyone? B-)
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It would also appear that any asking call is NOT artificial - as it does not convey any information - it asks for it. Does this make Moscito a natural system?

You are rather missing the point, which is not surprising as many do. Take Stayman as a good example. Stayman is an Asking Bid - "do you have a 4 card major?" But Stayman also shows something. It varies by system but a typical construction might be:-

 

a weak hand short in clubs

a weak hand with both majors

an invitational+ hand with one or both 4 card majors

an invitational+ hand with 5+-4+ majors

a GF hand with 5+ cards in a minor suit

 

You can add or remove additional hand types as you see fit. It does not matter though, the Asking Bid shows something. This is the case for all Asking Bids that are not forced (puppets) - they deny the ability to bid something else. That is even true in a relay system, something that some system designers sadly like to gloss over when it comes to disclosure.

 

Where a bid genuinely does not show anything is in the case of a puppet. But few of the artifical calls in Moscito are puppets, so your (hopefully tongue-in-cheek) argument about Moscito being natural is clearly rather wide of the mark.

 

It is also not at all clear that the suggested 2m responses are not natural under the definitions given. A short counter-example should suffice. Suppose we play up-the-line. Partner opens 1 and I hold a 4=4=4=1 hand. Would it be unnatural for me to respond 1 knowing that this, in effect, asks Opener if they hold a 4 card major? This is precisely the same situation as the 2m response, other than that that is not forcing, which makes it "more" natural if we are to believe pran's interpretation. As for holding a 4 card major, as far as I can tell the suggestion would be for Responder to bid 2m also with a long minor, so that would not seem to be a problem. In this way one of P - 1NT; 2m - 2M; 3m and P - 1NT; 3m is weak and the other invitational, which is just perfect when working without any artificial bids to help.

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