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how to bid with void


cencio

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With most standard agreements I think East just bids Stayman and then blasts to 6 over a 4-card 2 reply.

With an expert level Stayman you could show 5-5 and then keycard or control-bid, but the result is the same.

 

I would expect that most people in the US would start with a transfer bid rather than Stayman

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With most standard agreements I think East just bids Stayman and then blasts to 6 over a 4-card 2 reply.

With an expert level Stayman you could show 5-5 and then keycard or control-bid, but the result is the same.

Stayman? Have never heard of that with 5-5 before - how do you continue after the almost certain 2?

 

Seems like the normal starting point for standard bidding would be 1N - 2 - 2 - 3 - 3 after which you can use voidwood 5 - 5N - 6.

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helps to have extensive agreements over 1nt (range?)

covering many responder hand-types.

 

In Western Style 2/1 Game Force 3/3 were often used to show 5-5 weak (3H) and 5-5 strong (3S) in the majors.

 

You might look at expert pairs convention cards to see what they use.

 

In my research over the last year I have copied about 25 top pairs cards to my computer and watched how they play them.

 

Strong club and other systems would differ, as would Polish Club based systems.

 

Find one that works for you and your fav partner.

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I would expect that most people in the US would start with a transfer bid rather than Stayman

 

Probably.

I guess it depends on how you would handle 5-4 GF: if that goes through Stayman then it makes sense to handle 5-5 GF as spades transfer then hearts.

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Right, but I was referring to your 'most standard agreements', which I'm pretty sure doesn't include 2 denying a five card major.

 

Got you.

My 4-card Stayman is getting rusty, but I seem to remember that after 1N 2 2 (no 4cM) it would go 3 here.

Or if you use that sequence for 5-4 GF then 1N 2 2 3 for 5-5 GF.

Either systemation is possible, but you need to distinguish between 5-4 GF and 5-5 GF somehow, just as you need to be able to distinguish between 5-4 INV and 5-5 INV.

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In the UK with old-fashioned Acol bidding, there was the Weissberger convention available, similar to pescetom's 3 bid in his sequence, also showing 5-5 majors. 1NT (15-17/16-18) - 2 (Stayman) - 2 (no 4 card major) - 3 (5/5 majors, asking for 3 card major support).

 

Old-fashioned Acol didn't have voidwood or exclusion, though, which are useful additions :)

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In the UK with old-fashioned Acol bidding, there was the Weissberger convention available, similar to pescetom's 3 bid in his sequence, also showing 5-5 majors. 1NT (15-17/16-18) - 2 (Stayman) - 2 (no 4 card major) - 3 (5/5 majors, asking for 3 card major support).

 

Thanks for this curiosity, will investigate :)

No real surprise, there are only so many bids available and wheels have to be round.

Using 3 would waste the valuable possibility of a third (3) reply and using 3 the bid could no longer be INV+.

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In the USA, a very common treatment is to play 3H over 1NT as a 5/5M invite and 3S as 5/5 GF or better). Then the auction goes:

 

1NT 3S(1)

4D(2) 5D(3)

5NT(4) 6S

 

(1) 5/5M game force or better

(2) spades, with a good hand (c is H with a good hand; 4h/s are minimum hands)

(3) exclusion

(4) two, no Qs (don't count Ad, although we don't have it)

 

Cheers,

Mike

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In America the standard way of showing 5-5 majors and a GF hand is 2 followed by 3.

In the UK, the traditional method is to bid 2 followed by 3, commonly known as Extended Stayman these days but (as Felicity mentions) more properly called Weissberger. This shows a GF hand with 5-5 or 5-4 in the majors and asks Opener to bid a 3 card major.

In my preferred methods, 5-5 majors GF is shown by bidding 2 followed by 3.

Finally, a reasonably popular extension to Texas transfers is to play that a 4 response shows 5-5 majors. If this is in use then it is also normal for 1NT - 4; 4M - 5 to be XRKCB for the major, though some use 4 or 4NT for this when M=. In any case, this is another possible way of handling the hand irrespective of the rest of the NT structure.

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