when opponents make a jump overcall of 1NT in sayc
#2
Posted 2011-June-12, 12:49
what would X mean, if say made a simple 2H overcall?
If X after a 2H overcall would be T/O, than the X after 3H is also for T/O,
just the likelyhood, that it gets passed out increases.
With kind regards
Marlowe
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#3
Posted 2011-June-12, 12:56
You have to be careful with doubles of two level interference. I think there is a strong preference among experts to play those doubles as takeout as well, but penalty doubles are fairly common. If i recall correctly, penalty is the standard meaning of a 2 level double when playing Lebensohl.
probably best if you discuss and settle on something with your partner(s).
#4
Posted 2011-June-12, 14:33
I don't know if this double is defined in SAYC but if it isn't then that ought to mean that it is t/o
Off-topic: lebensohl is not part of sayc. If you don't play lebensohl I think you have to play negative doubles at the 2-level also. It is less clear if you do play lebensohl, since then almost all gf hands and some weak hands can be bid without the negative double.
#5
Posted 2011-June-12, 15:51
#6
Posted 2011-June-12, 15:52
helene_t, on 2011-June-12, 14:33, said:
Yeh, that's true. But we just double with those strong hands you are referring to, and bid naturally with unbalanced or 3NT inferentially minor oriented. With all the toys the opps have these days, we don't get many 3-bids anyway.
Double as take-out is better for sure; but we are willing to take the plus we get. Sometimes it is a nice one, sometimes it is not; but other times we were doomed to get to the wrong strain anyway and the little plus is just fine.
#7
Posted 2011-June-12, 16:00
If partner open 1nt and you have QJxx xx Axxx Jxx you want to double. It doesn't matter what your 2NT bid mean.
Penalty doubles are thing of the past in those sequencies, no elite pair play it as far as I am aware and I personally don't know anybody who would like to play those doubles as penalty.
At 3level it's equally clear. dbl is just points, what else you will bid with KQx xx Axxx Kxxx ?
(This is about the best treatment, no idea what those doubles mean in sayc)
#8
Posted 2011-June-12, 16:18
#9
Posted 2011-June-12, 17:14
#10
Posted 2011-June-12, 18:33
The standard ACBL convention card has a box to check if you are playing negative doubles after partner opens 1NT.
#11
Posted 2011-June-13, 02:39
bill1157, on 2011-June-12, 12:29, said:
1NT-(3♥)-X
Bill
♥
No doubt:
ACBL SAYC: your double is penalty.
BWS2001Defaults 2/1:
"A double of a natural two- or three-level overcall is negative, of a higher bid is for penalty."
Mind that you can easily change those defaults, and that anyway it is best to have them confirmed by the partnership.
#13
Posted 2011-June-16, 20:29
helene_t, on 2011-June-12, 14:33, said:
I don't know if this double is defined in SAYC but if it isn't then that ought to mean that it is t/o
Off-topic: lebensohl is not part of sayc. If you don't play lebensohl I think you have to play negative doubles at the 2-level also. It is less clear if you do play lebensohl, since then almost all gf hands and some weak hands can be bid without the negative double.
No this is not quite correct. Standard SAYC has always included pen x of interference at two level, tho this is modified by a lot of partnerships, esp. those who like "stolen bid", which wasn't around when SAYC first came out, but is pretty much standard treatment now when not playing lebensohl. In Standard Sayc, it should be noted, an auction like 1nt -- 2♥ -- 2♠ is supposed to be forcing too. 3 level minor bids also forcing.
Original SAYC did consider it a good idea to play x of jump overcalls at the 3 level as takeout, but commentators always urged one to discuss this with partner
Over weak nt 12-14 (10-12 did not exist) it was considered okay to play take out at both the 2 & three level, but we were advised to treat it as a penalty situation if we had not made this specific agreement.
That's how i remember it anyway -- been twenty yrs since i last looked at the booklets.
#14
Posted 2011-June-17, 04:43
wickedbid1, on 2011-June-16, 20:29, said:
You should make it clear that you are talking about LOL standard, not anything a reasonable player would play.
-- Bertrand Russell
#16
Posted 2011-June-17, 07:20
- hrothgar
#17
Posted 2011-June-18, 01:18
There are essentially three problems that come up when opponents overcall. These are: (1) responder wants to compete but isn't sure in which suit (2) responder wants to penalize (3) responder needs to distinguish between a "to play" bid, an invitational bid, and a forcing bid at the three-level.
Stolen bid is a terrible method because it doesn't really help you in any of the three above situations. For example, after 1NT-(2♥) you still have no call on a competitive hand without a suit (double would be 5+♠). You still cannot penalize except by passing and hoping opener finds a double. And you are not necessarily even helped that much in distinguishing your three level calls. Certainly some club level players use "stolen bid" but I have not seen any good players use it beyond a 2♣ overcall.
Lebensohl helps a lot with the third problem (there are some variants like rubensohl and transfer lebensohl which have pluses and minuses and maybe better). I think either penalty or takeout doubles are playable at the two-level and have seen strong pairs using either method. My feeling is that penalty is better over a natural-ish 2♠ overcall and takeout is better over a natural-ish 2♥ overcall (basically because you're much more likely to want to compete if you might get to play at the two-level, and opener is similarly more likely to find a balancing double over 2♥ when you have the penalty hand than he is over 2♠).
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#18
Posted 2011-June-19, 20:27
mgoetze, on 2011-June-17, 04:43, said:
Sorry, by "Standard", i mean "most common statistically if one has to guess", which i suppose is a very idiosyncratic usage.
I was not recommending stolen bid as a treatment, nor would i as i don't like it, nor would i presume that my system preferences are those which should be adopted by a reasonable player, whatever that term might mean in your corner of the universe.
SAYC was once a fairly stable system, but no longer. Playing on-line pick-up I can't respond Two NT to a one level opening anymore, for example, because 30-40% think it is 10-12, 30-40% think it is 13-15, 5-10% treat it as forcing unlimited, and quite a few assume Jacoby without Jacoby being on either of our profiles!
There are on-line guidelines in some sites recommending 10-12, but this is an infection from 2/1 (and other systems, but mostly from 2/1, esp. people who switch back and forth between 2/1 & SAYC), tho no doubt 10-12 jump to two NT will eventually become "Standard" SAYC too, [i.e. the statistically best guess (not quite yet tho, unless one is partnering somone from Eastern Europe)]. Classic Sayc, of course you know, is 13-15, like BBO Standard. Classic Sayc has no bid for 11-12 very flat hands that can't respond one over one in a four card suit, rather embarrassing for such a venerable system, but there is a price to pay for simplicity.
The Standard American Green Card and even more exotic Standard American Orange Card have gone the way of the Dodo, sadly.
By "LOL standard" I assume, mgoetze, u mean "lots of laughs standard" and not "little old lady standard", as the latter term seems to include a lot of prejudgement. Some of my best friends are LOL.
#19
Posted 2011-June-19, 20:32
wickedbid1, on 2011-June-19, 20:27, said:
I'm glad you have funny friends