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Raises by opener after a reverse


  

16 members have voted

  1. 1. 3S

    • Forcing
    • Nonforcing
    • Depends on vulnerability
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I’d say not necessarily very weak. On the contrary.

 

It is GF

Ingberman specifically defines 2 in this sequence as the weakest bid you can make.

 

Thanks all for the replies - for this specific auction, placing weak hands with 5 spades into the 2 response, since that's below 2, makes a lot of sense; opener can still find a 3-5 major fit by bidding 2 next. In fact, the primer mentioned that latter part, but I didn't grasp the effect that has on the 2 bid.

 

Under that assumption, hands that would reject an invite like Stephen Tu mentioned can't exist, so spade raises would become forcing.

 

In other sequences where 2NT would be the negative, having an invitational spade raise sounds fine.

 

Of course, the best solution is just to make sure you agree something in advance, whatever that is :)

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Ingberman specifically defines 2 in this sequence as the weakest bid you can make.

Sorry. I thought Ingberman was just the 2NT « brake » convention to try, when respondent is not sure of game if opener is min, to escape at 3-level in one of opener’s suits.

A cheap 4SF is nice but you don’t always have this available when responder bids Hs (or when opener’s 2nd suit is Hs). That is why we decided to limit 4SF for GF hands with unclear strain or level.

The fact that we play strongish reverses (17 good HCPs min unless’freakish distribution), so opener promises to bid again, then repeating responder suit is ambiguous but necessarily forcing. Under load 4SF but put more hands in the rebid suit. Not sure what gains!!😀

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As per my limited knowledge of ingberman,the responder holding 5/7 HCP and a flat hand with a 4Card spade suit, having been forced to bid ,bids 2NT as a relay and opener with Just 17 /18 HCP bids 3 Clubs then it is not forcing to game.As per the convention responders first one level bid has to be the cheapest 4Card suit the responder has denied both D and H as having 4cards.As per my understanding of the convention,which does not explain what to bid with a5pointer hand holding 6carder suit,it is difficult to pass a clear cut remark.However it is said in the convention that if a bid other than 2NT or a bid of 3C by opener over the responders 2NT are not made then all other bids are game forcing,which I feel embarrassed to understand,Since the opener who could simply have passed the 2S weak bid then his raise to 3S,for reasons better known to him,is a forcing bid and in a regular partnership showing interest in a slam.A 4S bid by opener over responders 2S bid is a sign off showing no further interest having heard the 2 bids by responder.
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Since the opener who could simply have passed the 2S weak bid then his raise to 3S,for reasons better known to him,is a forcing bid and in a regular partnership showing interest in a slam.A 4S bid by opener over responders 2S bid is a sign off showing no further interest having heard the 2 bids by responder.

 

The trouble is that 2 is forcing.

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Sorry. I thought Ingberman was just the 2NT « brake » convention to try, when respondent is not sure of game if opener is min, to escape at 3-level in one of opener's suits.

A cheap 4SF is nice but you don't always have this available when responder bids Hs (or when opener's 2nd suit is Hs). That is why we decided to limit 4SF for GF hands with unclear strain or level.

The fact that we play strongish reverses (17 good HCPs min unless'freakish distribution), so opener promises to bid again, then repeating responder suit is ambiguous but necessarily forcing. Under load 4SF but put more hands in the rebid suit. Not sure what gains!!😀

 

The brake here is the cheaper bid between 2NT and the 4th suit.

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Some of you posters are seriously confused about the various structures people play over reverses. Various combinations are possible, and playable, but one has to be in agreement with partner otherwise disaster will ensue. Also it's important to know what the common assumptions are, which to some extent are going to be country/region dependent. And many of the details require extensive partnership discussion.

 

Assume action has gone 1m-1M-2R:

Just some of the issues:

1. What does responder do with only 4cds in M and a weak hand, trying to get out in the best partial:

a) 2nt

b) cheaper of 4th suit and 2nt

AFAIK a) is "Ingberman", and b) is "Bridge World Standard", but I am not quite sure about Ingberman since I don't have a ton of definitive sources on that. Choice A gives a cheaper 4th suit artificial forcing on some auctions, but B is probably better in being able to get out in 2nt when it is right. I think B is more common.

 

2. is 2M forcing or NF.

Forcing is far more common. It gives max room for opener to make a descriptive rebid, rather than cramping auction on things such as 1c-1s-2h-3d-?. If 2S is forcing, which it is for most people, it can be anything from weak 4/5 HCP to VERY VERY STRONG, including game and slam forcing hands. So many posts above are talking about opener passing 2S, which is impossible unless you have an unusual agreement to play a very weak/limited 2M rebid. 2M NF caters to 2M being last making spot, but can complicate other auctions. After 2M, ambiguous strength F1, 5+M, normally at least opener's 3M/3m/2nt are NF.

 

3. Are you doing something special on this auction 1c-1s-2d, where 2H is so cheap? Certainly one can alter things to take advantage of the space such that weak hand 5cd spade also bids 2H, and 2S is GF, or any of a ton of different ideas (2h weak or strong, 2S+ intermediate; transfer rebids). Probably it is ideal to treat every reverse sequence individually, but that ratchets up your complexity a lot and now your ranges for auctions are different after 1c-1s-2h-2s vs. 1c-1s-2d-2s, which might lead to forgets.

 

4. How does responder bid with 4cdM and a NT hand of various ranges? Jump 3nt should have some upper limit and preferrably be of some narrow range so opener knows when to invite/bid 6. 2nt, often a weakness signal (if the cheap 4th suit weakness was unavailable), can include some stronger NT hands that bid on after opener shows a min reverse, since the 2nt bid is forcing. Ranges for these bids vary considerably by partnership.

 

5. After a 2nt weakness signal, does opener with a min reverse always bid 3c (catering to responder's weak 4-6+ blacks), or does opener rebid his minor? What does opener do with some moose that wants to find responder's potential stopper in 4th suit for 3nt? (I personally like opener's 4th suit bid to be a GF reverse looking for this stopper).

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2. is 2M forcing or NF.

Forcing is far more common. It gives max room for opener to make a descriptive rebid, rather than cramping auction on things such as 1c-1s-2h-3d-?. If 2S is forcing, which it is for most people, it can be anything from weak 4/5 HCP to VERY VERY STRONG, including game and slam forcing hands. So many posts above are talking about opener passing 2S, which is impossible unless you have an unusual agreement to play a very weak/limited 2M rebid. 2M NF caters to 2M being last making spot, but can complicate other auctions. After 2M, ambiguous strength F1, 5+M, normally at least opener's 3M/3m/2nt are NF.

 

In England, 2M NF and the 4th suit strong is popular. A preference of opener’s first suit and raise of the second suit also NF in this method. I think it is playable, but if not, it isn’t super important since reverses are fairly rare.

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1. What does responder do with only 4cds in M and a weak hand, trying to get out in the best partial:

a) 2nt

b) cheaper of 4th suit and 2nt

AFAIK a) is "Ingberman", and b) is "Bridge World Standard", but I am not quite sure about Ingberman since I don't have a ton of definitive sources on that. Choice A gives a cheaper 4th suit artificial forcing on some auctions, but B is probably better in being able to get out in 2nt when it is right. I think B is more common.

 

 

B is ingberman. A is lebensohl

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