Pre-empting with two Aces, etc.
#1
Posted 2013-December-08, 15:37
What are people's thoughts on playable ranges of pre-empts (not HCP, but on a scale of destructive to constructive)? What about offense vs defense - would you open a weak 2 or weak 3 with two aces, or A + a side KQ, etc, or do you prefer a purer hand?
Should I just play partner for an "average" pre-empt (say 1 defensive trick) and not worry that he might have something much bigger or much smaller?
Thanks,
ahydra
#2
Posted 2013-December-08, 16:33
#3
Posted 2013-December-08, 16:39
But IMO you shouldnt worry too much about ODR for preempts the same way you open KQJx,KQJx,xx,xxx and Axxx,Axxx,Ax,Axx the same way.
What IMO is important is the VUL and the spots of the preempt suit. JT986x,QJT97x, KT987x scream preempt while AJxxxx suggest that another trumps suit may easily be a lot better.
For instance, he doesn't like being used as a human shield when we're being shot at.
I happen to think it's a very noble way to meet one's maker, especially for a guy like him.
Bottom line is we never let that difference of opinion interfere with anything."
#4
Posted 2013-December-08, 16:57
benlessard, on 2013-December-08, 16:39, said:
But IMO you shouldnt worry too much about ODR for preempts the same way you open KQJx,KQJx,xx,xxx and Axxx,Axxx,Ax,Axx the same way.
What IMO is important is the VUL and the spots of the preempt suit. JT986x,QJT97x, KT987x scream preempt while AJxxxx suggest that another trumps suit may easily be a lot better.
You open a 12 point balanced hand the same way as a 16 point balanced hand? What on earth is your NT range?
I agree with sfi. I would personally play partner to have more when nonvulnerable and less when vulnerable.
#5
Posted 2013-December-08, 17:08
What constitutes an acceptable preempt depends heavily on a number of factors: IMPs vs MPs, Vulnerability, seat, bidding so far, opposition tendencies, partnership philosophy, partnership agreements, opposition agreements, how good our partnership defence is, and state of the match/event. And these are even before you look at your hand. There you have to consider suit honours, suit texture, shape, major suit length, outside honours, defence, lead direction (and who's likely to be on lead), suits not yet bid, and holdings in suits already bid.
Given this list, it's pretty hard to come up with good guidelines for all situations. The best thing to do in a serious partnership is to sit down and discuss all of these things to arrive at some sort of a consensus in general approach.
For example, A8xxxx - Axxx xxx would be a mandatory opening at this vulnerability in some partnerships but unthinkable in others. I'd be less inclined to open it at IMPs, vulnerable, or second seat, but more likely to overcall with a preempt, especially if partner's a passed hand. Your second hand - KQ10xxx Jxx x xxx - looks to me like a 3S overcall at favourable (but not against all opponents, in all situations, or with all partners), but at unfavourable I may choose 1S.
Et cetera...
In short, discuss with partner and then play partner for a middle of the road preempt in your style. If partner then does something weird after preempting, they have something unusual and you can try and work it out at that point.
#6
Posted 2013-December-09, 03:33
#7
Posted 2013-December-09, 05:46
Similarly, I hate having rules such as not to preempt with 2 first round controls or a 4 card major or a limit raise in the other major, whatever. Sure, these are guidelines that make a preempt flawed; but the bottom line is that we want partner to be in a better position than the opponents. If we have a hand where we want partenr to raise with any 3 card support, or bid 4♠ over 4♥ with 4 card support, or 3 support and a heart void, then the preempt is fine. If we think doing this would be bad, because we have too much defence for example, then the preempt was wrong even if the position and colours was good for it.
In other words, what we care about is that partner can make a decision and is guessing less than the opponents. You can quantify this with ODR and the 1-10 scale as in PBaB or you can just think about possible hands and likely auctions; or just go by feel. The bottom line is that strict rules for all preempts are bad. Rules for specific preempts are ok providing they are well thought out and do not become a straight-jacket.
#8
Posted 2013-December-09, 09:43
lowerline, on 2013-December-09, 03:33, said:
I assume you write this on your convention card?
#10
Posted 2013-December-09, 10:16
Lord Molyb, on 2013-December-08, 16:57, said:
13-15?
#11
Posted 2013-December-09, 13:16
Playing sounder preempts helps with the lead and not missing better contracts, but you disrupt less often. It is a trade-off where the partnership should draw its own borders.
#12
Posted 2013-December-09, 14:07
Lord Molyb, on 2013-December-08, 16:57, said:
I agree with sfi. I would personally play partner to have more when nonvulnerable and less when vulnerable.
put one ace too much...
For instance, he doesn't like being used as a human shield when we're being shot at.
I happen to think it's a very noble way to meet one's maker, especially for a guy like him.
Bottom line is we never let that difference of opinion interfere with anything."
#13
Posted 2013-December-09, 14:44
Now I don't have a problem with impure, or offshape, preempts. I play EHAA after all. But no matter what we've agreed our preempts to be, whether they're Schenken-pure or EHAA-crazy or anything in between, I expect partner to not preempt with a hand that doesn't fit; and if she does, and I make the wrong decision in the end, to accept her part of the responsibility for the wrong decision.
#14
Posted 2013-December-09, 15:19
lowerline, on 2013-December-09, 09:49, said:
Steven
So you pass as dealer with x AJ9xxx xx Axx, or do you open 1♥?
Opening 1♥ actually makes it easier for LHO to come in with spades than does passing, and opening can cause all kinds of problems in a 2/1 style, since partner will get us too high on a lot of misfits. I think passing or opening 1♥ are both losing propositions compared to opening 2♥. I do think that it is important to play decent methods over weak two openings, but surely all serious partnerships have reasonable agreements.
#15
Posted 2013-December-10, 02:41
mikeh, on 2013-December-09, 15:19, said:
Opening 1♥ actually makes it easier for LHO to come in with spades than does passing, and opening can cause all kinds of problems in a 2/1 style, since partner will get us too high on a lot of misfits. I think passing or opening 1♥ are both losing propositions compared to opening 2♥. I do think that it is important to play decent methods over weak two openings, but surely all serious partnerships have reasonable agreements.
With that hand I will pass. I will open x AJTxxx xx ATx with 1♥ though.
I believe there is not much of a disadvantage by passing in 2nd hand. But in 1st hand I hate to pass this.
Also, I am playing Multi. We have good agreements after that, but none that let me find out below the game level whether the weak two contains two aces...
Steven
#16
Posted 2013-December-10, 03:40
Standard weak 2's are wide ranging, most people write (at least where I'm from) 5-10HCP. Obviously when you're making any bid that flexible you can cause yourself issues. But I don't see any reason to pick on the 2 aces case specifically.
One of my partners opens weak twos with bad 5 card suits. He normally plays with his girlfriend who's pretty weak so he's just trying to generate swings. He loves them in general though. It's too much for me. I want to be able to know the extent of our trump fit to take my best shot at the LTT.
Another partner finds all kinds of reasons to talk himself out of opening a weak two. So he passes and the opponent's get to exchange information freely.
But my most regular partner and I open weak 2's on anything, but require 6 cards. If we have extra shape: like 6-5, we are willing to bid again/ double depending on the level. I love it. I just apply the LTT as best I can. Beyond that I avoid any decision that will make me look like a hero. If they make their way to a normal contract thereafter, then pass should guarantee about an average board. But I must stay alive to the fact that we may have rammed them into an abnormal contract: if so then double is often unnecessary and saving offers no hope. So our general approach is to make our best guess and then let it go afterwards unless a call seems clear.
#17
Posted 2013-December-10, 11:11
The trump A, with an outside KQ is *also* too much defence, just like A A. AKQxxx isn't. AQxxxx with an outside K is about the maximum I'd expect.
But some people play much more freewheeling preempts than that - some play much more conservative. But if I ask style, the opponents look at me funny...and then say "oh, she'll have 2/top 3, of course..." After you take those 5-7 out of the equation, there's not much left in 5-10.
#18
Posted 2013-December-11, 03:57
#19
Posted 2013-December-11, 04:15
#20
Posted 2013-December-11, 10:51
But my point is, which is the point of the original question, that "5-10, 6 cards" isn't the complete agreement of 99% of weak 2 bidders; and that those 5-10 are much more likely to be values in the suit, and softs outside, than hands with defensive tricks, because those hands tend to lose at 50-a-trick, as well as promoting phantoms (which include, potentially, the opening).