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Playing rubber bridge, strong NT (15-17) and 5 card majors - though I suppose it can also apply to 4 card majors (Acol) too - I had a friendly disagreement with my husband about his choice of opening bid.

 

At love all, in the first hand of the rubber, he held

 

[hv=pc=n&n=s76432hq6daqj2ckt]133|100[/hv]

 

He opened 1, whereas I said it would have been better to open 1. Do you agree?

 

Which made me think further: if he held a 5332 hand with a very poor 5 card major and a very good 3 card minor, is it all feasible to open a 3 card minor in preference to a 5 card major. A hand such as

 

[hv=pc=n&n=s76432hq6dakjcqt9]133|100[/hv]

 

And subsequently at what point does the suit quality of the major suit make it biddable, let's say JTxxx or Qxxxx or do players always bid 5 card majors irrespective of the quality in preference to 3 or 4 card minors?

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I will upgrade some very good 4-card majors to open on if my choice is 1m on xxx but never downgrade a 5 bagger like this.

 

Games are where the money is and on this, it's not 11 tricks in diamonds. It's spades or notrump and if partner responds 2 of something other than diamonds I can bid 2nt often blowing of a spade attack if partner should raise or get to spades when it's right. My partner is not shy about choosing 3nt instead of 4 with a 5-3 fit and in fact makes very good decisions.

 

Seems like opening 1 is trying to win a partscore or a small plus on defense, a long term losing strategy.

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If you don't open 1S basically you give up all your 5-3 fits forever. This is not at all like declining to open 7432 in a 4 cd M system where 4cdM is expected to be preferred over 4cdm; partner is still going to bid their 4cdM so if you have 4-4 fit you still tend to find it. This is too big a loss; there are hands where it's critical to be in 4S because the opps can run clubs/hearts eventually while you need to score your length tricks in spades for 9 in NT. If partner's 3 cd spades are weak, you'll lose a couple trump tricks but then get everything else. And in competitive deals, it's just super important to be able to outbid opp's hearts at 2S for 8 tricks when you can; also opening 1S can shut them out completely after 1s-p-2s-all pass.

 

The adjustments to make would be to perhaps pass allegedly forcing NT responses when min (unless you are systemically using F1nt on some subset of GF hands), play 3nt if partner offers after showing 3 cd fit, and be conservative cooperating with game/slam tries partner make since your trumps are poor. But treating it like a 4 cd suit is going too far.

 

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Playing rubber bridge, strong NT (15-17) and 5 card majors - though I suppose it can also apply to 4 card majors (Acol) too - I had a friendly disagreement with my husband about his choice of opening bid.

 

At love all, in the first hand of the rubber, he held

 

[hv=pc=n&n=s76432hq6daqj2ckt]133|100[/hv]

 

He opened 1, whereas I said it would have been better to open 1. Do you agree?

 

Which made me think further: if he held a 5332 hand with a very poor 5 card major and a very good 3 card minor, is it all feasible to open a 3 card minor in preference to a 5 card major. A hand such as

 

[hv=pc=n&n=s76432hq6dakjcqt9]133|100[/hv]

 

And subsequently at what point does the suit quality of the major suit make it biddable, let's say JTxxx or Qxxxx or do players always bid 5 card majors irrespective of the quality in preference to 3 or 4 card minors?

 

In both cases I would open 1 spade. Since the trump suit is the most powerful,the more cards you hold in it the better

So as an example holding AKQJ 109543 AJ 83 I would open 1 the longer suit NOT

1 because of all the pretty pictures(!)

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Open 1S. As Stephen Tu says, you need to find 5-3 fits, or indeed any major fit ASAP.

 

In the first two seats it's also important to describe your shape accurately in case partner has a rock crusher and starts looking for slam. I'm reminded of that wonderful line from S J Simon "He has shown 5 clubs, 4 spades, 3 hearts and a singleton diamond. That he holds nothing of the sort [4=3=3=3] is, perhaps, unfortunate."

 

ahydra

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1 Spade at rubber bridge because there are at least two ways to win at this form. With minimum hands getting a part score figures to be quite valuable. With enough for game one partner or the other might be able to offer a choice of games including 3 NT.

 

At other forms of scoring I might pass or bid 1 diamond; 1 NT 11-14.

I hate being at 4 Spades down 1 with marginal values. And the state of the game can influence the choice too.

But I would not be upset if my partner bid 1 Spade- it just isn't worth the bother when it is not a clear system violation.

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Playing rubber bridge, strong NT (15-17) and 5 card majors - though I suppose it can also apply to 4 card majors (Acol) too - I had a friendly disagreement with my husband about his choice of opening bid.

If I were not your husband I would have a more unfriendly disagreement with you in disputing my choice of opening bids.

 

Did you have

xx Kx Kxx Jxxxx

 

and the bidding 1 Spade - 1 no trump

2 Diamonds - 2 spades?

 

Maarten Baltussen

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Using the LTC to value the strength of your hand the first deal has 7 LTC and 1 is your openings bid. Having a very bad 5 card I would not mind if you started with 1 it's your choice to value your hand and as partner you should respect that.

 

The second deal with a 5xxx pattern and 9 LTC is a perfect hand to open 1 (or 1 depending on your agreements for a minor openings bid). Giving up a possible 5-3 fit in a major holding 8-9 LTC will lead most likely to a nt contract or a part score in partners (long) suit which has a better chance than a contract in .

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Ggwhiz is spot on in his reasoning. Using the opening bid to direct partner to the location of your values in defence is one consideration in bidding, but it is secondary to constructive auctions when game or slam is a possibility. When you open you have a better than even chance of playing the hand, so showing the location of your values will not help partner much at this point, and not at all during the play if your side declares.

 

The concept of values before shape lost out to shape before values decades ago, because fits are what lets you do well in constructive auctions and win competitive ones. You have a better argument for opening 1D if partner is a passed hand though. Now the right lead on defence is relatively more likely and game is less so.

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Thank you for all your replies. Looks like I owe my husband an apology. We arrived in a 4 contract on a 5-3 fit going down one, when the same nine tricks are available in no-trumps. I am perhaps 'resulting' on this one hand but I have learnt a valuable lesson here.
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In good old times the requirements to open a four card major suit were at least Q10xx and any five card suit was biddable.In modern days the restrictions no more are adhered to.A five card major must never be suppressed and that is followed by almost all the system when opening a normal 11/14 hand.So the hand has to be opened 1S and not 1D .The theory of a convenient rebid has to be kept in mind always.The hands are almost borderline openers and there is the convenient rebid of 2D available in the first hand.As regards the second example also the opening bid is 1S.One has to deviate sometimes in a hand of No trump pattern.A hand like say S-AKQx-H-AKx D-xxxC-xxx is hard to describe if you open 1C or 1NT either of which may go PPP and go down when opponents can not make anything..AN expert ,Ina vulnerable against nonvul,opened 1NT holding xx, AKxx-AKJx-xxx .It went all pass.Result was three down for minus 300 when opponents double dummy could have made 3S only that is 140 .He deservedly got a zero.On other tables it was opened 1D and opponents played in 2S.In short,the vulnerability,and other factors have to be kept n mind in opening a hand particulately in 1St and to some extent 2nd seat.
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Thank you for all your replies. Looks like I owe my husband an apology. We arrived in a 4 contract on a 5-3 fit going down one, when the same nine tricks are available in no-trumps. I am perhaps 'resulting' on this one hand but I have learnt a valuable lesson here.

 

4 of a major or 3NT? Often a difficult decision and more often than not a decision to reach correctly.

And MPs or IMPs can depend on the right choice. Is there any guidelines which can help?

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Thank you for all your replies. Looks like I owe my husband an apology. We arrived in a 4 contract on a 5-3 fit going down one, when the same nine tricks are available in no-trumps. I am perhaps 'resulting' on this one hand but I have learnt a valuable lesson here.

 

If you are going to open then it has to be spades. In mp, one should always open. I am not so sure in imps in first or second seat. It is a bad 12 point hand for a 4 spade contract. If my KQ was in the same suit, I would open. If I was down late in a match, I might pass if I believe opp would open and hope contract goes down in 4 spades while I make 3.

 

I would never open 1D.

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It's by no means perfect but keep your eye on the ball as to when to offer 3nt as a landing spot after a spade fit is established.

 

After 1 forcing 1nt, 2 then 3 as a 3-card limit raise gets an obvious pass here but if accepting, consider doing so with 3nt depending on texture etc. and trust partner to go back to 4 when it's right.

 

No guarantee but responder MAY have had an opportunity here depending on the auction and they occur fairly frequently if you play 3-card drury with bid where you live (when it's not a simple 3 or 4 of the trump suit) follow ups. Constructive raises and help suit game tries with one of ours being 2nt can work too.

 

Just keep the opportunities on your radar and be prepared for the occasional oops while fine tuning things.

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Thank you for all your replies. Looks like I owe my husband an apology. We arrived in a 4 contract on a 5-3 fit going down one, when the same nine tricks are available in no-trumps. I am perhaps 'resulting' on this one hand but I have learnt a valuable lesson here.

Well, this is more interesting. How did you reach 4 ? What kind of hand had your partner? Did anyone have the opportunity to suggest NT?

 

Maarten Baltussen

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