Kaplan Inversion being X
#1
Posted 2013-January-19, 03:46
Playing Kaplan Inversion / Interchange, it seems that opponents have a free double and it is not easy to deal with.
Is there any suggested defence after 1H - 1S(KI) - (X)?
Thanks,
Lync
#2
Posted 2013-January-19, 10:48
XX = extra values, no five card minor, not a 1NT rebid. Cannot be passed. 1NT by responder like 1♥-1NT forcing, asks further description.
1NT = extra values but still a 1NT rebid, ♠ stopper(s).
2m: five card or longer minor, can have extra values.
2♥: 6 or longer ♥s, minimum.
2♠: short in ♠s, extra values, 4-3/3-4/4-4 in minors. 2NT asks best minor.
3m: five card or longer minor, forcing to 3NT or 4m.
2NT and other jumps: whatever a jump shows in your system, but not a defensive hand that will XX first.
#3
Posted 2013-January-19, 16:26
However, you have the opportunity to describe your hand better by agreeing meanings, much along the lines of glen's suggestion. I vary that by having 2bids showing length (5 if new) and not strong (typically up to 14hcp) with stronger hands bidding 1NT or XX (which can include a 5 card minor, forcing when bid later). (Gazzilli is off, 2♣ is weak and 5.)
Crucial you have an agreement on 2♣ if you normally play it as artificial.
#4
Posted 2013-January-19, 16:54
Pass = 3 decent spades balanced or 4 weak spades
Others = nat
Let's punish them!
#5
Posted 2013-January-19, 17:00
- billw55
#6
Posted 2013-January-19, 17:11
lalldonn, on 2013-January-19, 17:00, said:
Looks like we play it "almost" the same.
I like playing 1NT differently - balanced or diamonds or a good 2♥ rebid - sort of a two under transfer. The advantage is that you can now play 2♣ as a relay (9+), 2♦ 5-8 to play opposite 3 2♥ 5-8 etc.
#7
Posted 2013-January-19, 17:43
- billw55
#8
Posted 2013-January-19, 19:44
lalldonn, on 2013-January-19, 17:00, said:
This is what kevin and I play except pass is always 5332. Almost everyone plays X as t/o of hearts, maybe it's better to play something else over X showing spades but I don't.
#9
Posted 2013-January-20, 11:26
Consequently "punishing them" with XX when you have a 12 count and 4 spades is more likely to give them a top. If you want to keep things natural, and keep a possible 4-4 spade fit in the frame, you could say that XX shows 4 reasonable spades, but usually forcing, not penalty, when responder does not have 4.
Personally, I would not want to waste the natural 1NT bid as a possible contract, particularly as my preference is not to open 1NT with a 5 card major.
#10
Posted 2013-January-21, 05:27
fromageGB, on 2013-January-20, 11:26, said:
Consequently "punishing them" with XX when you have a 12 count and 4 spades is more likely to give them a top. If you want to keep things natural, and keep a possible 4-4 spade fit in the frame, you could say that XX shows 4 reasonable spades, but usually forcing, not penalty, when responder does not have 4.
Personally, I would not want to waste the natural 1NT bid as a possible contract, particularly as my preference is not to open 1NT with a 5 card major.
The redouble shows 4 decent spades.
The point is to handcuff the fourth player - he will often run even when partner was going to, and he will often be running into trouble. If he passes, responder only passes with 3+ spades and a reasonable response - if that is handing them a top, they will have to work hard for their money. We have lost exactly nothing playing this defence to a double, since it in no way commits us to spades.
The point about this auction is that RHO is stepping into a misfit auction - if he has a typical take-out double shape with 42 in the majors, lefty will have 4 or five hearts and a weak hand with no clear bid a large proportion of the time. If we play that pass shows a balanced hand with potentially two spades he can pass with any hand (typically a 2533 4 count on which they were about to be incinerated), since partner will never have a hand that can pass out One Spade doubled. If we have the balance of the points, there is a good chance that we should defend a doubled contract. If we don't, it's a misfit for us as well, so we are best off pressuring him into premature action.
I generated a few hands and this one shows the standard situation:
..........9 7 2
..........6 3
..........9 5 4
..........A K Q J 4
10 8.......................K Q 6 4
10 9 7 4...................K 2
A 10 2.....................K Q 8 7
10 7 3 2...................9 8 6
..........A J 5 3
..........A Q J 8 5
..........J 6 3
..........5
If the auction starts 1[h]-p-1[s]-x and you play pass as balanced, West can pass and North will bid, but you have them nailed for a monkey after a redouble.