errline Posted August 5, 2005 Report Share Posted August 5, 2005 Hi, I have just started playing again after a long layoff and I have a basic bidding question. After the auctions 1♦-X-P-1♥ and 1♦-1♥-P-1♠ my understanding is that opener would need considerable extras to rebid. I've never seen it covered in a book, but unless my memory is tricking me, my better (ACBL Flight A) partners taught me to play it something like this: P shows a minimum hand with nothing much to say. Often would have been a 1NT rebid. X would be a card-showing double, in a better than minimum hand with no other clear rebid, say 15 HCP. 1♠ or 2♣ would show a hand with near-reverse values (so about 15 HCP for a 5-4, at least a good 13 for 5-5 mnors). 1NT shows 18-19 balanced if playing 15-17 NT, maybe only 17 if playing weak NT (not sure?). It seems to me this bid in particular has to show a lot. You are often (always over the X) saying you have a shot at 1NT over partner's near bust hand. 2♦ is the only bid that doesn't require a good hand. I would do that on a decent 6 card suit and just a little extra. I have several times erroneously taken rebids in auctions like this from otherwise competent-seeming partners to mean that they had extras. My questions are: 1. Is the scheme above basically correct according to standard expert practice? 2. How would it change over a 1-level balance, or 1-level overdcall and 1-level advance, instead of a takeout double and response? 3. What kind of values would opener need to rebid in a new suit or X if advancer jumps over a X, supports an overcall at the two level, or makes a constructive new suit bid at the 2-level? Thanks! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
awm Posted August 5, 2005 Report Share Posted August 5, 2005 There's frequently a difference between "standard expert practice" and "standard BBO expert practice" so keep that in mind. A free 1NT rebid when partner has never made a call should always show the 18-19 hand, or perhaps something slightly off-shape with equivalent values. Double is normally takeout-oriented, and should show extras if not in balancing seat. Note that: 1C-P-P-1S; X is takeout and should show a good hand.1C-1S-P-P; X is just balancing and could be a minimum; partner's pass here doesn't deny values Similarly I think 1C-1H-P-1S; X doesn't need to show much extra since partner can have cards Free bids of new suits or rebids of opener's suit are a lot more about shape and good suits than values. After 1D-P-P-1S, I would rebid 2C on most 5-5 hands with decent suits, even something like: x xx KQJxx KQxxx. I think this is fairly normal. Auctions like 1D-1H-P-2H can be a good place for some kind of good/bad 2NT. Note that responder doesn't really deny values on this auction -- something like 8-9 points without four spades or a diamond fit is perfectly possible. With 5-5 shape it often pays to bid 3C here even on fairly minimum values, although it might be nice to be able to distinguish the good 5-5 from the bad one. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
errline Posted August 5, 2005 Author Report Share Posted August 5, 2005 From what I can tell after a week or two, BBO player levels don't correlate that well to anything. ;-) Your reply makes a lot of sense. Particularly the shape bids. If you use LTC, extra card points, Zar points or something like that rather than HCP then that would bring the shape-based rebids just about into the hand strengths above. The difference would be in promised defensive values. I've always assumed a balancing double is basically mandatory even with any minimum hand when playing negative doubles, which means always. Thanks very much for the help. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mikeh Posted August 5, 2005 Report Share Posted August 5, 2005 I've always assumed a balancing double is basically mandatory even with any minimum hand when playing negative doubles, which means always. Not quite. A reopening double, based on a minimum hand, should be short in the overcall suit. Thus Jxx KQx AQxx Jxx: After opening 1♦, and hearing a major suit overcall passed to you, you should not reopen. This is based on the idea that partner is highly unlikely to hold a penalty double when you hold these kinds of cards in the opps suit. Also, partner, by failing to bid 1N, double or raise, is unlikely to hold a hand that makes competing a good decision. Note that this approach will lose out should partner hold a difficult hand: say a 7-9 count with a 5-6 card♣ suit. But this is a game of percentages, not perfection :) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
coyot Posted August 5, 2005 Report Share Posted August 5, 2005 I would think that same-level preference bids do not have to guarantee any extra strength - and if so, then reversing guarantees much more. 1♦ with a 2♥ reopen evidently pushes partner pretty high, while a 2♣ rebid with can be done even with 5-4 and a good minimum. I don't see why a lower-suit rebid should be stronger than repeating ♦ - on the contrary, a hand with 5-4 in minors will be generally safer to rebid than a hand with 6 in one minor and the same HCP. 1NT should ALWAYS be strong :). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
han Posted August 6, 2005 Report Share Posted August 6, 2005 The auction: 1D-(1H)-pass-1S2C should definitely show extras. With a minimum you have no business bidding unless you are very distributional. Then you might bid 4C or higher. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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