Jump to content

Stayman or Transfers with both majors


Recommended Posts

We have a teaching group of 'improvers'(Acol) and want to extend their use of Stayman and Transfers to include 5-4 and 5-5 major holdings. There are different schemes and differences of opinion as to which one should be recommended /taught. (We don't want to introduce any new devices such as Smolen at this stage)

One scheme that Andrew Robson and others advocate for all responder hands is: Stayman with all 5-4 hands - Transfers with all 5-5 hands (except Stayman with 5-5 weak). It has a weakness in that you can't invite game with 5-4. Other schemes I have looked at have weaknesses in other areas. If you use transfers with 5-4 I don't think you can differentiate between 5-4 and 5-5 holdings.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Stayman continuations are a mess and people even play custom followups over Jacoby transfers. I feel like almost regardless of what you pick, the students are going to want to change it up later. So pick something that's simple and doesn't end up forming a lot of baggage. If someone claims to have a very good solution to your problem my first reaction is to be very wary - there's so many custom Stayman versions out there, don't buy into one just because someone else likes it.
  • Upvote 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

What we do:

 

5-4s no game ambitions opposite no 4M go through stayman. We have the agreement that 1N-2-2-2 we bid 2 with 3-2 in the majors as we occasionally do this when 4-4 and very weak

 

5-4 inv+ we transfer, it is viable to stayman and bid 3 of your 5M over 2 with the inv hand or the Forcing one

 

5-5 we bid 4 directly if to play in game or definitely continuing, 2 then 3 then 4 is a mildish slam invite, with the weak hand we usually stayman then bid 2 (knowing partner will correct as above)

 

This structure is slightly unusual because we use 1N-2-2-3M as something unrelated to holding both majors.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

As an improver I was always interested in the options, but am surprised that just because something has a name like 'Smolen' you don't want to teach it.

At the end of the day it should be your judgement as a teacher as to what to promote (probably something you would play yourself), while comparing and contrasting various approaches, their strengths/weaknesses can be beneficial as a teaching tool.

 

I open all balanced 15-17 hands with 1NT as I like to limit strength as this makes other sequences more precise. A decent Puppet Stayman can then be used to find the 8 card fits.

This approach may be more of an issue for a Weak NT, but the principles are the same and the 5-card suit can be a bonus.

For me I would want Puppet Stayman over 2NT openings so why not over 1NT. This approach maintains an overall philosophy and was easy to grasp for improvers like myself

 

For me 5 & 4/5 is conceptually the easiest to teach as it can have a simple sequence which starts with a transfer i.e.

1NT-2 5+

2-2 GI+ 4+

2/3NT (GI/GF shows 2) responder can pass with 4 or bid with 5.

You can add a wrinkle in that say SI hands can bid 3 directly showing exactly 4.

 

With 4 & 5 I use a Puppet Stayman such that

1NT-2

2/3NT shows 3 & 2 exactly.

while

1NT-2

2 (no 5cm)-3/4 shows the 45 hand with the 8-card Major fit now being guaranteed.

There is a similar wrinkle for SI hands in that you can transfer to first and then bid 3

 

This is the stage I have reached at the moment, but over time it may well change.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

As an improver I was always interested in the options, but am surprised that just because something has a name like 'Smolen' you don't want to teach it.

At the end of the day it should be your judgement as a teacher as to what to promote (probably something you would play yourself), while comparing and contrasting various approaches, their strengths/weaknesses can be beneficial as a teaching tool.

 

I open all balanced 15-17 hands with 1NT as I like to limit strength as this makes other sequences more precise. A decent Puppet Stayman can then be used to find the 8 card fits.

This approach may be more of an issue for a Weak NT, but the principles are the same and the 5-card suit can be a bonus.

For me I would want Puppet Stayman over 2NT openings so why not over 1NT. This approach maintains an overall philosophy and was easy to grasp for improvers like myself

 

For me 5 & 4/5 is conceptually the easiest to teach as it can have a simple sequence which starts with a transfer i.e.

1NT-2 5+

2-2 GI+ 4+

2/3NT (GI/GF shows 2) responder can pass with 4 or bid with 5.

You can add a wrinkle in that say SI hands can bid 3 directly showing exactly 4.

 

With 4 & 5 I use a Puppet Stayman such that

1NT-2

2/3NT shows 3 & 2 exactly.

while

1NT-2

2 (no 5cm)-3/4 shows the 45 hand with the 8-card Major fit now being guaranteed.

There is a similar wrinkle for SI hands in that you can transfer to first and then bid 3

 

This is the stage I have reached at the moment, but over time it may well change.

 

Over the weak no trump that most Acol players play, this is terrible, you need garbage stayman, more reasonable over a strong NT

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Over the weak no trump that most Acol players play, this is terrible, you need garbage stayman, more reasonable over a strong NT

Do you know how often garbage Stayman is useful and isn't a Weak 1NT meant to be pre-emptive anyway?

 

I guess you still have a Garbage Stayman of sorts for and transfers sort out the Weak 5+M?

1NT-X and you should have an escape sequence?

When your 1NT is 3325 you will still struggle compared to just playing in 1NT

So this leaves the really Weak hands with 1NT-x-? when perhaps 4th seat should be balancing anyway.

 

I'm the oddity in a club where most play Acol and I occasionally see the 2 response being passed, but can't recall a happy ending in the Major for the opponents

 

As an alternative over a Weak NT I can suggest transfer and then 4M for GF hands and Stayman followed by a Quest transfer for GI hands. This leaves garbage Stayman in place? and is straightforward to teach. https://bridge.fandom.com/wiki/Quest_transfer

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Do you know how often garbage Stayman is useful and isn't a Weak 1NT meant to be pre-emptive anyway?

 

I guess you still have a Garbage Stayman of sorts for and transfers sort out the Weak 5+M?

1NT-X and you should have an escape sequence?

When your 1NT is 3325 you will still struggle compared to just playing in 1NT

So this leaves the really Weak hands with 1NT-x-? when perhaps 4th seat should be balancing anyway.

 

I'm the oddity in a club where most play Acol and I occasionally see the 2 response being passed, but can't recall a happy ending in the Major for the opponents

 

As an alternative over a Weak NT I can suggest transfer and then 4M for GF hands and Stayman followed by a Quest transfer for GI hands. This leaves garbage Stayman in place? and is straightforward to teach. https://bridge.fandom.com/wiki/Quest_transfer

 

It's most useful when you are say 5-4 in the majors and partner is 2-4 or even 2533, if you have to transfer you bury the heart fit.

 

1N-X we play comnpletely different methods.

 

When 1N is 3325 there is no problem, we only move when 44 if very weak and 2 often plays as well as 1N, often better.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

My preference would be that all major weak two suiters (5-4 either way or 5-5) go through Stayman. GF 5-4 majors go through Stayman and Smolen (if you don't want Smolen, I won't fight too hard). Invitational 5-4s transfer and then bid the other suit. Invitational or stronger 5-5s respond 3. As for Andrew Robson, who's he? B-)
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Over the weak no trump that most Acol players play, this is terrible, you need garbage stayman, more reasonable over a strong NT

Playing standard, you can bid Exit Stayman with 4+, 3+ and 3+. Playing Puppet you can bid Exit Stayman with 5+, 2+ and 2+. It is more or less a wash but if anything the edge is with Puppet here. A Puppet scheme is surely not the solution to the OP though, who specifically mentions not wanting to introduce any new devices.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

If you use transfers with 5-4 I don't think you can differentiate between 5-4 and 5-5 holdings.

Yes you can. Well, except weak holdings, maybe.

 

Weak (54) or 55 starts with Stayman. Over 2, bid 2 (2 would be invitational with five spades).

Invitational (54) transfers to the five card major and bids the four card major.

Game forcing with (54) starts with Stayman and bids the four card at the three level over 2.

Invitational or better with 55 bids 3 over 1NT.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yes you can. Well, except weak holdings, maybe.

 

Weak (54) or 55 starts with Stayman. Over 2, bid 2 (2 would be invitational with five spades).

Invitational (54) transfers to the five card major and bids the four card major.

Game forcing with (54) starts with Stayman and bids the four card at the three level over 2.

Invitational or better with 55 bids 3 over 1NT.

Never quite understood why 3 needs to be used with 55 when 2-2-2 does the trick for both 54 & 55 GI+. A NT bid denies 3 so must have 3 when balanced. A raise to 3/4 or a cue bid to show slam interest in seems to do the job. Perhaps someone can enlighten me?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

If you don't use 4 suit transfers as we don't, 1N-3 is natural and forcing this is pretty common in the UK among club players and some better onbes.

I use 4-way transfers as I like the super-accepts

1NT-3 being 4441 short or

1NT-3 being 4441 short or

1NT-3 3154

1NT-3 1354

all GF

Any other proposals worth considering?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Any other proposals worth considering?

Why yes, there are.

 

1) 2 range ask or clubs, 2NT Puppet Stayman, 3 diamonds weak or GF, 3 NF invitational.

2) 2 transfer to clubs, 2NT transfer to diamonds, 3 Puppet Stayman, 3 exactly invitational with 6(+)M

3) 2 range ask or clubs, 2NT asks small doubleton (usually invitational with a long minor, superior to transfer with superaccepts), 3 weak diamonds or (4441) with the singleton outside clubs, 3 multi-invite as above (part of HEEMAN)

4) 2 transfer to clubs, 2NT transfer to diamonds, 3 minor suit Stayman (responses are 3 = 'I have a 5cm', 3 = 4 clubs, may have 4 diamonds, 3 = 4 diamonds, at most 3 clubs, 3NT = no 4cm. 3 shows a slam try in a minor), 3 5-5 majors.

 

You can mix and match as well if you like. I'm sure there's more I've missed. For what it's worth, I don't like any of them ;)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

"Exit Stayman"? Never heard of it.

It just means bidding 2 and passing the response. The problem is that Garbage Stayman is used interchangeably both for this and for Crawling Stayman - bidding 2 and following with a natural non-forcing call (most often 2) showing 2 places to play.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It just means bidding 2 and passing the response. The problem is that Garbage Stayman is used interchangeably both for this and for Crawling Stayman - bidding 2 and following with a natural non-forcing call (most often 2) showing 2 places to play.

I suppose that's one solution to the problem. The other is not to let some nimrod (not you, Gilithin) who doesn't know what he's talking about define what should be defined as "Crawling Stayman" as "Garbage Stayman".

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I was interested in this but the above discussion is much more complicated than Smolen

 

As for 55 still working on it. Maybe transfer to your best major and take it from there (risk of being passed). Or even improvise with Smolen with 55

 

Just Stayman and keep trying to show your suits somehow if strong enough

 

Remind me never to join a Bridge class. I would never get past improver class. Maybe I would never even get into it

Link to comment
Share on other sites

As for 55 still working on it.

 

If you’re very weak, it is better to transfer to S. That avoids the 2D transfer being Xed and they compete to 3D. And if they still compete, maybe your hand is worth balancing and you can cheaply show your H suit.

 

As for game invites (which can be light in HCPs given the shape, K 5th twice is enough), game strength, slam invites and slam hands, it then depends on what your Stayman (and Xfers) continuations are. And probably where you live too!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...