What to do with strong 2 hands in 2/1
#1
Posted 2018-November-15, 15:57
A situation which comes up from time to time. The strong two hand when playing weak twos. There is a risk of partner passing when you only need a few points or one more Trump or trick for a low point game. An example is when you can see 7 and half tricks, know that it doesn't take much for the other 2-3 tricks and partner may not have 6 points or 3 trumps for a fit.
You are not supposed to abuse 2C although I have stretched that a bit sometimes. If you use length points rather than short points you can sometimes justify it.
What does everyone do. Do you stretch 2C or open one and risk missing out
Cheers P
#2
Posted 2018-November-15, 16:52
thepossum, on 2018-November-15, 15:57, said:
What does everyone do. Do you stretch 2C or open one and risk missing out
Not sure what this has to do with 2/1. Same issue crops up with most any system that doesn't use strong twos and that covers a lot of ground.
In any case, in answer to your question I can definitively say "It depends".
- Some hands will get opened at the one leve
- Some hands with get opened 2!C
- Some hands may even get opened 2N
If you want a more definitive answer you might consider posting an actual hand that you are unsure about...
#3
Posted 2018-November-15, 17:32
Even Acol style strong 2s are closer to 8.5 tricks not 7.5
#4
Posted 2018-November-15, 18:38
Also I played strong 2s and ACOL for years and don't need a lecture
I'm talking about situations where you don't want partner to pass under any circumstances
It seems a few people are still in patronising mode. What a shame
#5
Posted 2018-November-15, 18:42
For example, if you have AQ-Q-KQJxx-AKJxx:
If you open 2♣, the auction is almost sure to start as follows:
2♣ - 2♦ - 3♦ - 3♥ - 4♣.
What are you going to do over each of your partner's responses? (Eg, if they bid 5♣ you might be going down in game, or have a cold slam.. with no idea which).
Conversely, if you open 1♦, then jump to 3♣, you get to hear two descriptive bids from partner and you're at a much lower level. The risk? What if partner passes, and you can make slam? Can you really think of any set of hands where none of the three players at the table are able to bid 1♥ or 1♠? The chances of that happening are virtually 0. The risk of opening 2♣ - where you're going to be in the wrong contract almost every time - is far greater.
#7
Posted 2018-November-15, 19:41
thepossum, on 2018-November-15, 15:57, said:
A situation which comes up from time to time. The strong two hand when playing weak twos. There is a risk of partner passing when you only need a few points or one more Trump or trick for a low point game. An example is when you can see 7 and half tricks, know that it doesn't take much for the other 2-3 tricks and partner may not have 6 points or 3 trumps for a fit
You are not supposed to abuse 2C although I have stretched that a bit sometimes. If you use length points rather than short points you can sometimes justify it.
What does everyone do. Do you stretch 2C or open one and risk missing out
thePossum highlights a hard problem, which responder can mitigate, to some extent, by stretching to keep the bidding open, on poor hands. Also, you can try redefining some openers:
- 1♣ = ART F1 (e.g. Precision, Polish, "Phony").
- 2♣ = ART F1 like 2/1 but extended to include most ~4 loser hands.
- 2♦ = ART F1 (e.g. Benjamin, Multi) to cater for those ~4 loser hands.
- 2N = BAL or semi-BAL i.e Treat some strong shapely hands as balanced e.g. open 2N not only with 5332, 6322, 5422 but also with 4441, 5431, etc, where the singleton is a minor..
- 3N = ART F1 Long strong major c 8-10 tricks.
- 4N = ART F1 Long strong minor c 9-11 tricks.
#8
Posted 2018-November-15, 19:52
Ignore subsequent bidding and lay of cards. I'm talking about S hand only
#12
Posted 2018-November-15, 20:12
thepossum, on 2018-November-15, 19:55, said:
But your second bid after 1♠ tells partner whether you are at the low end, or at the high end. So there is no "gap" - if you have 19-21 points you can tell your partner that just as easily as when you open 2♣ to show more.
But as mentioned, you aren't required to have a certain number of points to open 2♣. Some hands with more than 22 shouldn't be opened 2♣, and some with less should, based on how you expect the auction to go. I would open your hand 2♣ because 1♠ could easily be passed out, and you have a comfortable way to show your hand and find out what you need after 2♣ - 2♦ - 2♠.
#13
Posted 2018-November-15, 20:12
thePossum provides a good example hand with a reasonable chance of game opposite a balanced Yarborough.
#14
Posted 2018-November-15, 20:14
#15
Posted 2018-November-15, 20:14
#16
#17
Posted 2018-November-15, 21:11
#18
Posted 2018-November-15, 21:23
If you make the 2♣ bid not universally game-forcing, allowing responder to bid negatively twice, opener is allowed to let the bidding rest in three of a major, or four of a minor if they want. Some players do use this caveat in the SAYC system.
I am more inclined to open 1♣ if the hand is ♠Axx ♥x ♦AKQ ♣AK10xxx. The reason why is that with 2/1 partner is encouraged to bid a major at the one level with a poorer hand than standard in the hope of finding a major suit fit as more-than-occasionally the ♣ bid is made on a three carder. The same applies to a 1♦ opener.
If you open 1♣/1♦ there is also more chance the opponents will overcall at the one level, allowing you to bid again whereas a 1♥/1♠ opener means the opponents have to bid at a higher level to compete and statistically you will have less opportunity to bid again.
A ♠Axx ♥x ♦AKQ ♣AK10xxx opener is looking for 3NT or 5 of a minor contract, and for that to occur you need partner to have more cards to make it happen, so you're less likely to miss anything if partner hasn't got a bid. And as I said with the hand you posted, four of a major is achievable with just Qx in the trump suit.
#19
Posted 2018-November-15, 21:53
smerriman, on 2018-November-15, 20:58, said:
4S in the pass out seat?
Surrendering to existential truth is the beginning of enlightenment.
#20
Posted 2018-November-16, 01:13
thepossum, on 2018-November-15, 18:38, said:
Also I played strong 2s and ACOL for years and don't need a lecture
I'm talking about situations where you don't want partner to pass under any circumstances
It seems a few people are still in patronising mode. What a shame
Here you go again. You ask questions and then abuse those who take the time to answer them in a perfectly reasonable manner. Carry on like this and they won't bother.
London UK