Is this a 2C opener, and how best to find slam?
#1
Posted 2018-September-14, 03:55
#2
Posted 2018-September-14, 06:27
we could start talking, but with clubs as our longest suit, I would
be at 3NT in no time, and what would I have showed?
If you want to make a strength showing opening bid, go with 2NT
#2 my try
1C - 1H
2S (1) - 3D (2)
3NT (3) - 6H (4)
all pass
(1) since 1S is non forcing, I dont get it, but I was forced to play it
that way, and 1S nonforcing is more mainstream than 1S forcing
(2) FSF, playing 2NT as some kind of Lebensohl would be reasonable
(3) what else
(4) what else, ... we have 31-33HCP between us, I have a 8 card suit
any heart with partner will be brilliant
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#3
Posted 2018-September-14, 06:32
I know I'd start with 1♣ with the south hand, not sure if I'd bid 1♥ or 2♥(SJS) with the N hand, probably just 1.
We'd go
1♣-1♥
2N (GF unbal, always really big if not with hearts)-3♥(7+♥, single suited there is a semi forced 3♣ here)
3♠-4N
5♣(0/3)-5♦(Q♥ ?)
5♥(no)-5N (expect me to have AKxxxxxx maybe with the J, do you have xx ?)
6♥ no
If we started 1♣-2♥(single suited big or decent 5+♥/4+♣ GF)
2N (at most stiff J in hearts)-3♥ (single suited and good enough suit to play a heart slam opposite small singleton)
3♠-4♦ (cues, don't cue shortage in partner's suit)
4♠(Kickback)-5♦(2 without)
5♠ (K)-5N (something useful to tell you about above 6♥, must be Q♠
6♣ (bid a grand with the K or Q)-6♥ (nope, nor Q♦)
6N (partner has 2 entries, either the heart suit establishes for 1 loser, or we take our chances on the side suits
#4
Posted 2018-September-14, 06:33
2♠-4nt
5♦*-7nt
*1 or 4 keycards for spades
South doesn't show the void because it is in partner's suit.
I was too greedy on this one. 6♥ is enough.
#5
Posted 2018-September-14, 07:19
#6
Posted 2018-September-14, 11:24
Back to the real world, a reasonable mainstream approach might be:
1C 1H
2S 3H
3N 6H
2S is necessary because we have a gf despite the misfit. 1S is non-forcing for a variety of reasons, the main one is that sensible bidding methods allow for differentiation of hand strength early in the auction. When one plays wide-range opening bids, as in standard methods, is it important, for intelligent system design, to have opener begin to limit his or her range on the second round.
3H: while one can play a lebensohl approach here, it is not as important or as useful as after a reverse. 2S, unlike the way most play reverses, established a game force. Lebensohl type structures over reverses are used, in part, to allow the partnership to play below game. Here, 3H cannot be passed.
An alternative might be 4H, to stress the suit, but the hand is too good for that. We are driving to slam opposite a jump shift.
3N is ugly but better than any alternative
6H is practical. The chances of grand are not good. Opener has at most a stiff heart, and we need specific cards and (if that stiff is not the queen) some luck, to make grand. Meanwhile, if partner is looking at, for example, AKxx Q Axx AKxxx, he can recognize the power of that trump queen, and all the controls, and bid the grand, which has to have play opposite any hand that can bid 6H on this auction.
I don't see any alternative to 6H. We can't invite a choice of slams. We can't bid a new suit at the 4-level. 5H asks the wrong question, and 4H is what we'd bid with KQ10xxxxx and out.
#7
Posted 2018-September-14, 14:55
mikeh, on 2018-September-14, 11:24, said:
Back to the real world, a reasonable mainstream approach might be:
1C 1H
2S 3H
3N 6H
2S is necessary because we have a gf despite the misfit. 1S is non-forcing for a variety of reasons, the main one is that sensible bidding methods allow for differentiation of hand strength early in the auction. When one plays wide-range opening bids, as in standard methods, is it important, for intelligent system design, to have opener begin to limit his or her range on the second round.
3H: while one can play a lebensohl approach here, it is not as important or as useful as after a reverse. 2S, unlike the way most play reverses, established a game force. Lebensohl type structures over reverses are used, in part, to allow the partnership to play below game. Here, 3H cannot be passed.
An alternative might be 4H, to stress the suit, but the hand is too good for that. We are driving to slam opposite a jump shift.
3N is ugly but better than any alternative
6H is practical. The chances of grand are not good. Opener has at most a stiff heart, and we need specific cards and (if that stiff is not the queen) some luck, to make grand. Meanwhile, if partner is looking at, for example, AKxx Q Axx AKxxx, he can recognize the power of that trump queen, and all the controls, and bid the grand, which has to have play opposite any hand that can bid 6H on this auction.
I don't see any alternative to 6H. We can't invite a choice of slams. We can't bid a new suit at the 4-level. 5H asks the wrong question, and 4H is what we'd bid with KQ10xxxxx and out.
What would 4♥ over 2♠ be ? isn't that the KQ10 8th and out hand ?
#8
Posted 2018-September-14, 15:29
Cyberyeti, on 2018-September-14, 14:55, said:
I may be quibbling, but I'd assume a suit that would play for one loser (most of the time) opposite a void. Obviously this is a very narrow target, and I am not claiming to have a lot of experience with this hand-type However, whenever we jump in a constructive auction, especially when not supporting partner, I think it pays to have a very narrow range of holdings to be shown.
Should it be, for example, AKQJxxx or KQJxxxxx? I don't know, but my gut tells me that it should be the holding that (a) most strongly suggests we play in this suit and (b) suggests that responder has no slam interest. AKQJxxx is a great suit for slam, including in notrump, should partner have a stiff, whereas KQJxxxxx is usually taking zero tricks if not trump....well, I am not ruling out one side entry, but the suit is definitely not a favourite to run for a lot of tricks.
Is there a meaningful difference between KQJxxxxx and KQ10xxxxx? I think so, if the message is how the suit rates to play opposite a void. I'd prefer KQJ10xxxx or KQJ9xxxx, but we don't get these hands enough for me to be too fussy, and you may already think I am splitting meaningless hairs.
Put another way, I'd like partner to feel that he could raise 4H without worrying about his hearts, after 1C 1H 2S 4H. He'd still need a remarkable hand, but he rates to have one after that start.
#9
Posted 2018-September-14, 16:08
mikeh, on 2018-September-14, 11:24, said:
I still play that 1♣ - 2♥ is strong after which slam is a breeze. Almost always a winner at imps and we lose a wjs. Big deal, I always had the same shape and a 12 count when partner made one.
The only reason I have not won the past 10 world championships is because the entry fees are too high.
What is baby oil made of?
#10
Posted 2018-September-14, 16:17
mikeh, on 2018-September-14, 11:24, said:
I could have won the last half dozen or so ACBL Championships relatively easily...
However, I decided to be nice and disclose that I cracked their silly little hand generator.
(Not sure if that counts as an idiosyncratic bidding method, however...)
#11
Posted 2018-September-14, 20:05
ggwhiz, on 2018-September-14, 16:08, said:
The only reason I have not won the past 10 world championships is because the entry fees are too high.
Wjs are far from the only other use for 2H, btw
#12
Posted 2018-September-14, 21:57
As for the rest, mikeh has pretty much said it all.
#13
Posted 2018-September-14, 22:27
Three suiters play well if you find a fit so you may need to make 3 natural bids for best result.
If you have a way to show a 3-suiter after opening 2♣ is different but most don't.
Is perfect hand for a strong 2♦ three suiter bid if you want to wait 6 months for such a hand to come up if Multi isn't allowed.
#14
Posted 2018-September-15, 03:16
1!C - 1!D
1!S - 1NT
3!D - 3!H
3!S - 4!D
4!H - 4NT
5!C - 6!H
1!C 2+!C if 16+ bal otherwise 5+!C
1!D transfer 4+ !H
1!S 5+!C 4!S unlimited
1NT 8+ relay
3!D 4135 or 4045 18+
3!H suit setting
The rest are cue or key card.
#15
Posted 2018-September-15, 03:45
mikeh, on 2018-September-14, 15:29, said:
Should it be, for example, AKQJxxx or KQJxxxxx? I don't know, but my gut tells me that it should be the holding that (a) most strongly suggests we play in this suit and (b) suggests that responder has no slam interest. AKQJxxx is a great suit for slam, including in notrump, should partner have a stiff, whereas KQJxxxxx is usually taking zero tricks if not trump....well, I am not ruling out one side entry, but the suit is definitely not a favourite to run for a lot of tricks.
Is there a meaningful difference between KQJxxxxx and KQ10xxxxx? I think so, if the message is how the suit rates to play opposite a void. I'd prefer KQJ10xxxx or KQJ9xxxx, but we don't get these hands enough for me to be too fussy, and you may already think I am splitting meaningless hairs.
Put another way, I'd like partner to feel that he could raise 4H without worrying about his hearts, after 1C 1H 2S 4H. He'd still need a remarkable hand, but he rates to have one after that start.
OK, different philosophy, I would play in a GF situation it's the worst hand imaginable for a 1♥ response unplayable anywhere else (and I don't play WJS)
#16
Posted 2018-September-15, 04:06
P_Marlowe, on 2018-September-14, 06:27, said:
(1) since 1S is non forcing, I dont get it, but I was forced to play it
that way, and 1S nonforcing is more mainstream than 1S forcing
(4) what else, ... we have 31-33HCP between us, I have a 8 card suit
any heart with partner will be brilliant
First response already the best. In my view 1♠ would be forcing but the jump reverse serves to show a real powerhouse: lost of points no hand for 2 ♣
opening.
What else? Afraid to miss 7 ♥ of course. See no sensible way to reach that contract short of closing your eyes and blast it.
Maarten Baltussen
#17
Posted 2018-September-15, 05:51
el mister, on 2018-September-14, 03:55, said:
1♣-1♥2♠-4♥4NT 5♥ 6♥ simple direct and replaces a funny old muddle.4NT is RKCB and 5♥ shows 2 key cards.which MUST be the Ace and King of trumps.The grand slam would hinge on Q♥ being doubleton a 42% chance.
- Dr Tarrasch(1862-1934)German Chess Grandmaster
Bridge is a game where you have two opponents...and often three(!)
"Any palooka can take tricks with Aces and Kings; the true expert shows his prowess
by how he handles the two's and three's" - Mollo's Hideous Hog
#19
Posted 2018-September-15, 06:45