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The auction until 3 is great, both hands are just patterning out. North shows 45 with at most 2 hearts, South shows 5(+)3 and interest in not playing 3NT (either lacking a club stopper or extra shape in support of diamonds).

I think North should bid 3 on the third round - this typically shows a doubleton hearts, suggesting a 6-2 fit over 3NT and denying a club stopper. With the singleton king you can lie about the second card. Alternatively you can bid 3, for me this promises a 5-card suit but it might be the smallest lie on a good 4-card suit, and if partner raises the 4-3 fit is probably best anyway.

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The auction until 3 is great, both hands are just patterning out. North shows 45 with at most 2 hearts, South shows 5(+)3 and interest in not playing 3NT (either lacking a club stopper or extra shape in support of diamonds).

I think North should bid 3 on the third round - this typically shows a doubleton hearts, suggesting a 6-2 fit over 3NT and denying a club stopper. With the singleton king you can lie about the second card. Alternatively you can bid 3, for me this promises a 5-card suit but it might be the smallest lie on a good 4-card suit, and if partner raises the 4-3 fit is probably best anyway.

The main problem with 3H over 3D isn’t that one may end up in a 6-1 fit. After all, give south AQJxxx in hearts, and the stiff King makes the suit solid, while AQxxxx may lose no tricks and Axxxxx may fetch a 3-3 break.

 

The main problem is that many 2/1 players rebid 2H on a 5 card suit, requiring some semblance of stoppers for 2N. Now, south may think that the 5-2 is the best strain, only to find that he’s violated Burns Law of Total Trump….one should always have more trump than do the opponents. AQJxx might solve that problem, of course.

 

The hand is, imo, a nightmare.

 

My own preference is for north to rebid 3S…sort of fifth suit forcing. Opener shouldn’t raise with fewer than 3 cards…and on these auctions, sometimes a moysian is the best strain.

 

But I think all but the best pairs in the world are going to struggle on these layouts. The good news is that the field, in mps, and the opps, at imps, are likely to struggle as well.

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Although we still end up in an impossible auction, this is how I think these auctions should go

 

Over 1 2 is gf and a suit (5+) , 2/1M is our generic gf bid.

2 is either 6 cards or just a waiting bid, I've got minimum hand with 5 hearts, I deny 3 or the hand to bid nt, waiting for you to tell me more.

(whether we show 3 card support or the 6th is up to partners discretion, suit quality?)

2:3 I have 6 hearts

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This is one of those style issues that have been debated in detail over the years

 

Firstly is modern style promising 5?

Secondly is GF absolutely forcing to game, forcing to 4m or passable on a 3m rebid.

This is the key issue for partnership to decide

 

The 3 bid says I don't have enough to force to game in and I don't have the stopper for 3NT.

 

North can make 3NT on certain layouts with key cards dropping and a 4-4 club split and likewise 5.

West isn't overcalling 2 so is either weak or unlikely to have 5.

 

Systematically, my bidding simulator will pass 3 with North's minimum and without 2 Aces.

Eagerly anticipating the reveal.ph34r.gif

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The main problem with 3H over 3D isn’t that one may end up in a 6-1 fit. After all, give south AQJxxx in hearts, and the stiff King makes the suit solid, while AQxxxx may lose no tricks and Axxxxx may fetch a 3-3 break.

 

The main problem is that many 2/1 players rebid 2H on a 5 card suit, requiring some semblance of stoppers for 2N. Now, south may think that the 5-2 is the best strain, only to find that he’s violated Burns Law of Total Trump….one should always have more trump than do the opponents. AQJxx might solve that problem, of course.

 

The hand is, imo, a nightmare.

With only 5 hearts opener must have a 4-card suit outside or have 5332. With a 4-card spade suit opener raises spades, with a 4-card diamond suit opener raises diamonds on the previous round, and with a 4-card club suit opener should really bid 3NT now even if the suit isn't stopped. With 5332 without a good club stopper opener should bid 3 rather than 3 on the third round, preserving bidding space and showing more doubt. For me 3 shows 63, although this isn't fully standard (some people might bid the same way with 3=5=3=2 with weak clubs).

I do think that, with 3=5=3=2 and weak clubs, opener should rebid 3, not 4, over 3. Burn's Law is never violated that way.

Personally I wouldn't even feel that bad about rebidding 2NT over 2 with 3=5=3=2, although it isn't my first choice. We lost the clubs years ago.

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Over 1 2 is gf and a suit (5+) , 2/1M is our generic gf bid.

2 is either 6 cards or just a waiting bid, I've got minimum hand with 5 hearts, I deny 3 or the hand to bid nt, waiting for you to tell me more.

(whether we show 3 card support or the 6th is up to partners discretion, suit quality?)

2:3 I have 6 hearts

This is one of the biggest weaknesses of the strength-first approach to 2/1 GF. Since the major suit rebid does not promise a sixth, opener sometimes feels compelled to rebid the major suit another time at the 3-level. Almost always this is a mistake, it makes it impossible to tell the difference between a 7-card suit or self-sufficient 6-card suit, versus a hand that has nothing else to bid and look for doubleton support. Current expert standard is to make a cheap rebid in a fragment suit and hope partner voluntarily shows doubleton support. Sometimes you will play 3NT with a 6-2 fit available, but that is usually fine.

There are treatments to fix this (the Schuler shift, shape-first 2/1, nebulous 2 and artificiality on the third round of the bidding all help some) but personally I haven't had many issues with it once you are familiar with the 'rule' that opener should strain not to bid a 6-card suit a third time, especially if it is space-consuming.

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This is one of the biggest weaknesses of the strength-first approach to 2/1 GF. Since the major suit rebid does not promise a sixth, opener sometimes feels compelled to rebid the major suit another time at the 3-level. Almost always this is a mistake, it makes it impossible to tell the difference between a 7-card suit or self-sufficient 6-card suit, versus a hand that has nothing else to bid and look for doubleton support. Current expert standard is to make a cheap rebid in a fragment suit and hope partner voluntarily shows doubleton support. Sometimes you will play 3NT with a 6-2 fit available, but that is usually fine.

There are treatments to fix this (the Schuler shift, shape-first 2/1, nebulous 2 and artificiality on the third round of the bidding all help some) but personally I haven't had many issues with it once you are familiar with the 'rule' that opener should strain not to bid a 6-card suit a third time, especially if it is space-consuming.

 

The Schuler shift looks interesting but I don't think it's wise for us to add that complication - 2M = 6 it is.

 

edit: I've just spoken with someone whose partner wanted to play the SS but neglected to send them the complete system (isn't that a surprise) so they stopped playing it. Perhaps there is potential to add it with this partner.

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