DJNeill Posted May 19, 2005 Report Share Posted May 19, 2005 Hi all,The full WJ2005 book in English can be found here. Thanks,Dan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MickyB Posted May 19, 2005 Report Share Posted May 19, 2005 Cheers dude. Anyone know if this is starting to take over from WJ2000 on BBO? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
scoob Posted May 19, 2005 Report Share Posted May 19, 2005 The web site you are trying to access has exceeded its allocated data transfer. Visit our help area for more information. Access to this site will be restored within an hour. Please try again later.http://www.geocities.com/daniel_neill_2000/sys since Dan's site seems to be suffering some bandwidth throttling, I've made a mirror available of the WJ2005 document here: http://www.speedofwood.com/temp/WJ2005.zip Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Free Posted May 19, 2005 Report Share Posted May 19, 2005 The web site you are trying to access has exceeded its allocated data transfer. Visit our help area for more information. Access to this site will be restored within an hour. Please try again later.http://www.geocities.com/daniel_neill_2000/sys/ :( Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
scoob Posted May 19, 2005 Report Share Posted May 19, 2005 see my now edited last post :( Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gerben42 Posted May 20, 2005 Report Share Posted May 20, 2005 Great work. But playing with me PLEASE with the old 2-bid structure (Wilkosz & Weak 2s). Poor Andrzej Wilkosz... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Antoine Fourrière Posted May 20, 2005 Report Share Posted May 20, 2005 At first sight, I prefer WJ2000. I think weak notrumps with diamonds do better if they are opened 1♣. With five-four in the minors, you can now rebid 1N with five diamonds and four clubs (or a 1444) and 2♣ with five clubs and four diamonds. As for Wilkosz, I am all for opening these hands, but I think the same opening (both natural and multi have their pros and cons) should be used with a six-card major and with the Wilkosz hand type. I resent much more having to open 1♣ the rare 4=4=1=4 and the rare unbalanced game force or being unable to show at once a long club suit. Being dogmatic about quick pattern disclosure, I would prefer something like1♣ either a weak NT or 15-21 with clubs (usually a 5431 or a 6331) or 18+ balanced1♦ unbalanced with diamonds1♥, 1♠ five cards, preferably unbalanced1N strong, preferably a two-point range2♣ 11-14 with five clubs and a four-card major2♦ 7-10 with a six-card major or a five-card major and another five-card suit2♥ Precision three-suiter, but also NV/V a bad three-level preempt in any suit2♠ 11-21 with six clubs (quite unbalanced if 15-21)2N unbalanced game force which runs the risk of a pass if you open with a one-bid Another possibility would be1♣ either a weak NT or 15-21 with clubs (usually a 5431) or 18+ balanced1♦ unbalanced with diamonds1♥, 1♠ five cards, preferably unbalanced1N strong, preferably a two-point range2♣ 11-14 with five clubs and a four-card major2♦ either a weak-two bid in hearts (yes, responder often can't preempt) or a Precision three-suiter (yes, opener will have to rebid 2♠) or an unbalanced game force (yes, you wreak havoc on your own system)2♥ 11-21 with six clubs2♠ 7-10 with six spades or five spades and a five-card minor (shuts off hearts)2N 7-10 with five hearts and another five-card suit (shuts off their spades) Other permutations might be better, but it seems more important to convey the distributional nature of your hand when you have an opening bid than to gain some extra steps for uncommon hand types. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
david_c Posted May 20, 2005 Report Share Posted May 20, 2005 I resent much more having to open 1♣ the rare 4=4=1=4Personally I think that the 1♣ opening handles this hand rather well. You have an easy rebid whatever partner does (you're never forced to rebid 1NT), and the hand is not far from being balanced anyway. The fact that partner cannot rely on a doubleton diamond makes little difference, because the stronger options of 1♣ don't promise any diamonds either. and the rare unbalanced game forceThe "strong club" hands in Polish cover much more than just the game-forcing ones. The book gives 18+ as a guideline, and gives some examples where a 1♣ opening is preferred on even weaker hands. So really they're not that rare at all. Of course, you may decide you prefer to open 1♦, 1♥ or 1♠ with hands in the 18-21 range, in which case you're playing a rather different system. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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