Bidding as a Path
#1
Posted 2014-August-12, 08:48
I have long felt this, as a general proposition. For example, after opening a major and hearing a forcing 1NT, 2♣ as a rebid often makes for nice auctions if Responder does not pass, no matter what Opener has in clubs. Sure -- there are conventions that reflect this. I am talking about "natural" bidding, where you bid 2♣ simply because the auction will be easier if you bid 2♣.
A similar theme is a transfer to a major after a 1NT opening, followed by 3♣ simply because the auction works out nice if you rebid 3♣. Who cares what you have in clubs?
A recent discussion involved apparent insanity, when Opener started with 1♠, heard 2♦, rebid 2♠ as saying nothing more about spades, heard 3♣, and the rebid 3NT to show hearts under control, with the length of the spade suit being unknown. Responder, with 2-1-5-5 with mild slam interest, had a problem.
This made me think. If Opener has six spades and hearts stopped, with a minimum, this system cannot allow him to show all that he has, largely because the 2♠ call says nothing and is a wasted step along the path. Well, a plausible "solution" would be for Opener to rebid 2♥, because this makes the auction better. His later rebid of 3♠ will finalize all messages he needs to send. Obviously, this works wonders when Opener has 6-4 in the majors. What if, however, he has 6-3 in the majors? Maybe ♠KQxxxx ♥AQx ♦x ♣Qxx?
If Opener rebids 2♥ with this hand, and if Responder does not have four hearts, the auction will develop very well. All will be better. The missing heart will likely be immaterial to the real world. Only if Responder holds four hearts will there be a problem, but (1) that problem might well not materialize, and (2) that "problem" might not be the end of the world anyway. The Moysian risk might turn out OK after all.
The question is not so much whether this alternative sequence is right or wrong or insane or creative. The issue is whether this sequence is inferior or superior to the traditional sequence in the long run. The traditional sequence leaves the spade length unknown. The alternative sequence falsifies heart length. Either has problems; either has upsides.
The big question, though, is the degree to which deviation is acceptable as a tool to functional, complete sequences. IMO, if bids are seen as snapshots separated from a complete sequence, deviation is frowned upon with the result of strained sequences. If, however, calls are made in the context of a "complete sequence" thinking, deviations are more common and acceptable, with more fluid complete sequences.
-P.J. Painter.
#2
Posted 2014-August-12, 08:56
#3
Posted 2014-August-12, 10:10
barmar, on 2014-August-12, 08:56, said:
Not necessarily that simplistic. Another example or two, that are different:
1. Almost everyone will bid suits out of structure. E.g., you open a major despite 5-6 with a longer minor because the auction is easy.
2. Similarly, suppose with 2-1-5-5 you decide to respond to a 1♠ opening by bidding 2♣ rather than 2♦, prepared to reverse into 3♦ if necessary. This false 4-5 or 5-6 description might enable better sequences and thus be meritorious.
The idea is not just to shorten the requirements for the first rebid. Rather, the idea is to contemplate a full sequence that you will like, without strict requirements as to what the starting bid might be, and then to grab the starting bid that facilitates the sequence. That "start" could be with the opening bid, the first rebid, the first response, or at any other point in the sequence. That first act could be a pass, or it could be any other call.
A similar decision was made by Meckstroth in the Bridge Bulletin (and I picked that also before I saw his response). Basically, he had some 4-4-0-5 14-count with great clubs and great play. After 1♣ to the right, people came up with different calls, or passed. Meckstroth (and I) opted 1NT. Why? IMO, 1NT is the start of what would be expected to be the easiest series of possible sequences. Passing leads to strained sequences. 1NT can be a disaster, but the "total sequence" thinking suggests that a 1NT overcall will work best in the long run. It is clearly not descriptive, but who cares? He summarized as "I like bidding 1NT." I think the deeper meaning is that life is easy when you start with that initiating bid, rather than passing. Hence, the "like" is tied to future auction ease.
-P.J. Painter.
#4
Posted 2014-August-12, 13:43
kenrexford, on 2014-August-12, 08:48, said:
It is acceptable if is succeeds and it depends on pard's profile as a person.
Austere, rigid people will look at you as a criminal if your idea works and will shoot you if it doesn't.
Sensible people, like those who have the priceless virtue of being able to see different points of view, will give you high fives if it works and simply smile if it doesn't. The more caring ones would even lie to you something like "I would probably have done the same".
Still, the idea of twisting bids for convenience's sake is old. I think it was Roth who used to do it and comment along the lines of "If I can get past this round..." I'll give you an example I witnessed:
Axx
--
AKJTxx
AQxx
You pard
1♦ 1♠
??
3♣ is book bid, but bidding might get cumbersome afterwards. There is so much from pard you need to know that it's better to make the slight underbid of a space-saving 2♣.
#5
Posted 2014-August-13, 04:46
#6
Posted 2014-August-13, 04:48
#7
Posted 2014-August-13, 05:09
Consider two ways of viewing an auction of three bids.
first bid shows x feature and y parameters. Second bid shows z feature and narrows y parameters. Third bid clarifies x feature.
I will make 3 bids. At the end, I will have established a narrow y parameters, z feature, and a nuanced x feature.
These sound the same, but they are not when you consider imperfect hands. The first auction type requires that each choice along the journey approximate the specific step best. The second auction allows more radical departure from the specific step definition if the end definition is the best.
-P.J. Painter.
#8
Posted 2014-August-14, 03:27
#9
Posted 2014-August-14, 03:48
#10
Posted 2014-August-14, 12:16
kenrexford, on 2014-August-12, 08:48, said:
The person who cares is partner, the one working with you to get to the best spot. If your distortions are so bad as to make your bids meaningless, you destroy the two-way conversation. Using your other example, after 1♠-2♦;-2♥, can responder still splinter with a 2-4-6-1, and if so how does opener's 6-3-1-3 unagree hearts? The two-way conversation is off the path and onto the rocks.
#11
Posted 2014-August-14, 12:50
glen, on 2014-August-14, 12:16, said:
The person who cares is partner, the one working with you to get to the best spot. If your distortions are so bad as to make your bids meaningless, you destroy the two-way conversation. Using your other example, after 1♠-2♦;-2♥, can responder still splinter with a 2-4-6-1, and if so how does opener's 6-3-1-3 unagree hearts? The two-way conversation is off the path and onto the rocks.
The simple answer is that you don't unagree hearts. You accept the Dummy and play it out. If you survive, great. If not, next deal.
As for partner, you need the right partner type. I have said or heard partner say "Oh, you had that hand" countless times. This never causes partnership trust issues with those partners. In fact, my experience has been the opposite. My most trusting partnerships have been with people who are most willing for either of us to deviate for contextual reasons, perhaps because of a mutual recognition of the competence of the deviation logic. For example, I could probably chart out a proof that the higher the deviation likelihood, the higher the likelihood of making lucrative low level penalty doubles.
-P.J. Painter.
#12
Posted 2014-August-14, 14:16
#13
Posted 2014-August-14, 14:40
whereagles, on 2014-August-14, 14:16, said:
True. The bigger picture, though, is that a "deviation" is not necessarily as deviate as the non-deviation auction. Consider the idiotic auction from a while back where Opener started 1♠, then rebid spades without showing anything about length, and then rebid 3NT just to show hearts controlled. Contrast this with manufacturing a 2♥ rebid with a fragment because you have a sixth spade.
Which is more "accurate" in the end:
I have 5-6 spades with hearts stopped.
I have 6 spades, 4 hearts (really 3), with hearts stopped.
The latter is a "lie." But, the latter is a better definition of a hand with six spades and AQx in hearts. The round two deviations makes the round 3 completion more accurate.
-P.J. Painter.
#14
Posted 2014-August-14, 20:42
#15
Posted 2014-August-15, 00:02
kenrexford, on 2014-August-14, 14:40, said:
Which is more "accurate" in the end:
I have 5-6 spades with hearts stopped.
I have 6 spades, 4 hearts (really 3), with hearts stopped.
The latter is a "lie." But, the latter is a better definition of a hand with six spades and AQx in hearts. The round two deviations makes the round 3 completion more accurate.
I agree with Glen.
I like the fact that you are not afraid to challenge standard ideas, but on this one you are out to lunch, imo.
There are undoubtedly hands on which good players make bids that are distortions, but I think that if you look carefully at these situations they will be cases where there is literally no bid that isn't a distortion. Thus with 5M and 6m, and a minimum, almost all players open the major, but most would open the minor with any significant extras.
We open the major, with weak hands, because doing so is a lesser distortion than the alternative of reversing.
As for 1♠ 2♦ 2♥ as a distortion, this is partnership killing bridge. Heaven help you (bearing in mind that I am an atheist) should partner hold 4 hearts...good luck getting, ethically, back to spades.
If all you meant by this thread is that sometimes one must make a call that doesn't meet the systemic description of the call, then you have stated something that is so well understood by all experienced players that you have said nothing new. There are always hands that fall between the cracks in any system design. But when you go further, and suggest a deliberate misbid when a systemically accurate call is available, then you are playing solitaire, not bridge. More to the point, you seem to be revealing an attitude that suggests that you and you alone are in charge of your auctions. Roth did ok with that approach, but bridge was simpler in his day, his opps didn't bid very well (due to lack of methods), and the game has moved on. Plus neither you nor I are Alvin Roth Finally, Roth was famous for his 'mark time' bids, and if you are a student of the game you'll know that they were always a call made in situations in which ALL calls were distortions of some kind or another.
#16
Posted 2014-August-15, 00:39
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#17
Posted 2014-August-15, 05:11
A case study in point.
A semi pro partner of mine and I both had an emerging tendency to fabricate a 2D rebid in a 2/1 GF auction after a 2C response, because the auction works better than after a bulky 2NT rebid. Eventually, 2D was no longer a deviation but alerted and defined.
Similarly, delayed canapé rebids evolved in the same manner. This is where, for example, the first rebid is a fragment as a cheap call that later enables a third round bid in a four card suit that couldn't be bid earlier because of reverses, but with near reverse strength. The sequence is now definitional, with the first rebid known to be suspect and explained as such.
I have pre alerted in the past that many calls might be one shy of expected length because of this, as these exceptional sequences were emerging. The beauty was, from experience, was that some of the new treatments later definitional were sufficiently self protecting to be capable of evolutionary development with a good partnership willing to allow evolutionary deviation.
-P.J. Painter.
#18
Posted 2014-August-15, 13:39
jogs, on 2014-August-14, 20:42, said:
Do you play Stayman?
#19
Posted 2014-August-17, 09:47
The robot does this all the time, and since i'd rather have it be sane than brilliant, we damp down this tendency as fas as we can. I know it still does it, no need to sidetrack this discussion w/GIB reports
One example: You hold (say) 3154 and some values. Pard opens 1H. It is possible that 1S is a better call than 1N. Among other things, it sometimes prevents the opps from competing in spades, and as long as pard will have 4 spades for any spade raise, nothing bad will happen if he raises
Similarly: You hold (say) 1543 and GF+ values, red vs white. Again, pard opens 1H. It is possible that a "strong jump shift" into spades followed by a H-raise ( primary H, so there is no danger of playing in spades) is the answer; among other things, it preserves room, shuts the opps out, and may result in a favourable lead.
As long as partner is willing to go along with this style I think it is quite playable but in ACBL-land, anyway, I can't imagine how I'd alert these things; I suspect we wouldn't be allowed to use this general approach to bidding in a world where bids are as tightly regulated as they are.
#20
Posted 2014-August-17, 15:28
1. Never lie unless necessary.
2. Tell the least lie possible.
3. When in doubt, lie about suit length rather than hand strength.
4. When in doubt, lie about a minor suit rather than a major suit.
5. Tell a small lie now, if not doing so will cause you to tell a big lie later.
This seems to me what Ken is aiming at.
I agree with the code, though I would soften rule #3 a bit in view of the modern and reasonable "shape first" concept (the words "shape first" had not been uttered when EK wrote). However, rule #2 governs strength as well as shape, and it seems better to me to distort my shape rather than show a ace more than I have. I would gladly show a queen more than I have, though EK did not advocate this (though I bet he practiced it--he was a much better card player than his target audience).
I think Ken is on the right track, but his examples don't all pay as much attention to rule#2 as I would.