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AQTxx-75-void-AQxxxx What do you open?

#21 User is offline   whereagles 

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Posted 2006-May-31, 09:19

mikeh, on May 31 2006, 03:04 PM, said:

Of course, it was easy to predict the poster who chose 1...... some people don't need partners :D

You're just being childish, you know...?
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#22 User is offline   hrothgar 

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Posted 2006-May-31, 09:23

whereagles, on May 31 2006, 11:21 AM, said:

mike777, on May 31 2006, 12:39 AM, said:

1C and I feel strongly about this.
If Whereeagle does not open 1S I will be shocked...shocked I tell you.

You might be in for an even greater shock than you think... I'm considering opening this 4-loser hand 2 :D

I wouldn't open this hand with a strong club let alone a "standard" 2 opening.
Alderaan delenda est
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#23 User is offline   paulg 

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Posted 2006-May-31, 09:55

The strong clubbers seem happy to open this hand with 1, perhaps because they never regard the club suit as something they need to bid. I often wonder how extreme we have to make the hand to get them to show it (5-0-0-8 perhaps?) :D

Actually I'd have thought these folks would use the precision-style 2 opener. The bidding is surely not going to stop here and subsequent spade bids will probably show the 5-6 shape with no loss of accuracy over standard.

Paul
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#24 User is offline   Echognome 

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Posted 2006-May-31, 09:59

cardsharp, on May 31 2006, 03:55 PM, said:

The strong clubbers seem happy to open this hand with 1, perhaps because they never regard the club suit as something they need to bid. I often wonder how extreme we have to make the hand to get them to show it (5-0-0-8 perhaps?) :D

Actually I'd have thought these folks would use the precision-style 2 opener. The bidding is surely not going to stop here and subsequent spade bids will probably show the 5-6 shape with no loss of accuracy over standard.

Paul

I don't even have the 2 bid in my favourite system! I know it's a loss not to have it. I just don't get dealt the hands often enough and I'm at least starting the hand with a natural bid. Partner knows I can have longer clubs so won't take normal preference back to spades. In exchange I get my favourite bid which is an Ekren 2 (weak both majors) and I like that due to frequency. You pick your poison I guess.
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#25 User is offline   jdonn 

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Posted 2006-May-31, 10:05

cardsharp, on May 31 2006, 10:55 AM, said:

Actually I'd have thought these folks would use the precision-style 2 opener. The bidding is surely not going to stop here and subsequent spade bids will probably show the 5-6 shape with no loss of accuracy over standard.

Paul

Playing precision, if you open 2 with 5 in a major and 6 clubs, you really have to be very very minimum, like 9 to maybe a bad 11. That is because partner will pass a 2 opener far more often than a 1 level opener, and you will miss a lot of games when he didn't visualize a big major suit fit. Like here he could have KJxx Axx xxxxx x or something, where it wouldn't even remotely occur to disturb 2. However the converse doesn't apply, since if you reverse the black suits he will not pass a 1 opening bid, so you still find your club fit.
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#26 User is offline   MickyB 

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Posted 2006-May-31, 10:11

cardsharp, on May 31 2006, 04:55 PM, said:

Actually I'd have thought these folks would use the precision-style 2 opener. The bidding is surely not going to stop here

I don't think our side 5-card spade suit greatly affects the chance that the auction will die here, unless it is an indication of the quality of the shuffling and dealing.

For the strong clubbers, 1 then 3 also seems a pretty reasonable description of this hand.
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#27 User is offline   hrothgar 

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Posted 2006-May-31, 10:17

cardsharp, on May 31 2006, 06:55 PM, said:

The strong clubbers seem happy to open this hand with 1, perhaps because they never regard the club suit as something they need to bid. I often wonder how extreme we have to make the hand to get them to show it (5-0-0-8 perhaps?) :D

Actually I'd have thought these folks would use the precision-style 2 opener. The bidding is surely not going to stop here and subsequent spade bids will probably show the 5-6 shape with no loss of accuracy over standard.

Paul

The Precision style 2 opener really isn't all that popular with the strong club crowd anymore. Lots of pairs have migrated to using 2 to show a constructive hand with 6+ clubs. There are a number of other pairs who prefer to use this as some type of preempt.
Alderaan delenda est
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#28 User is offline   pclayton 

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Posted 2006-May-31, 15:03

Kalvan14, on May 30 2006, 04:46 PM, said:

1, without any doubt. clubs/spades is the most difficult 2-suiter to show after opening 1 [and normally you are unable to]. Quite likely that opps will show a red suit too. Another reason for keeping spades in reserve

I don't agree.

5-6 with / falls within one of the easier hands to describe. Its the 5-6 with the suits touching (5 / 6) that are a bear.
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#29 User is offline   lowerline 

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Posted 2006-June-01, 01:45

david_c, on May 31 2006, 09:34 AM, said:

whereagles, on May 31 2006, 03:09 PM, said:

mcphee, on May 31 2006, 01:59 PM, said:

The player who opens this hand 1S seems to feel that C will never be the spot to play

That's not it, at least not for me. The 1 opening is done mainly because it makes pard's life easier if LHO acts.

I would say this hand is a two-bid hand, by which I mean that you are intending to take a second free bid in competition even if the auction has got quite high. Thus, your aim is to describe your hand as accurately as possible in two calls. So you are not really very worried about what partner does on the first round, it's more important that you choose the bid which will enable you to complete the description of your hand next time. The way to do this is to open 1.

Having said all that, I often play systems where I am forced to open 1 on this type of hand (because 1 would be artificial) and I don't feel it's a significant loss to do that.

Suppose you are playing Precision. Do you open this hand with 1 or 2?
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#30 User is offline   mr1303 

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Posted 2006-June-01, 02:06

1 for me in a precision context. My 2 opener is frequently passed, since:

2 is a strongish enquiry, promises at least invitational values
2 and are forcing for 1 round.

Therefore, if partner has a 7 or 8 count and a 4 card spade suit, he's going to pass 2 and we'll miss a game. Therefore I have to open it 1.

I'll probably rebid 3 over 1NT, or indeed 2 of a suit, to show 5+5+ and concentration (NF)
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#31 User is offline   FrancesHinden 

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Posted 2006-June-01, 06:21

The difference between opening 1S in Precision and in a standard method, is that 1S is pretty much the systemic bid on this sort of hand. If you open 1S and then bid lots of clubs, partner will know you might have more clubs than spades (I suppose this is an extension of the precision style bidding with both minors: opening 1D then bidding clubs could have either minor longer).

If you open 1S playing a standard method and then bid clubs, partner KNOWS you have longer spades than clubs, or equal length, because the systemic opening bid with more clubs than spades is 1C. In some auctions I agree that won't matter, but then there aren't many auctions where it hurts to open 1C.

Now suppose it really is your hand and you have a slam on. It becomes vital that partner gets your relative suit lengths right. Give him Kxx in both black suits (I'm being kind) and the two red suit aces. Who's fault will it be when you go off in 7S on a 4-1 break with 7C cold? Yes, that's not very likely, but it's possible.
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#32 User is offline   whereagles 

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Posted 2006-June-01, 07:20

Well, playing standard methods you can also agree with pard that opening 1 and then bidding lots of clubs shows more clubs than spades.
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#33 User is offline   mcphee 

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Posted 2006-June-01, 08:06

The idea of agreeing with partner that opening 1S and later bidding C should show longer C is foolish. What is so difficult to understand that if a person opens 1C with the intention of later rebidding S twice if need be will show LONGER C? This would be true regardless of the suit opened.

The idea that to open 1S makes it easier for partner is way over rated. Consider when you choose to open 1S and the bidding goes like this, 1S 2H P 3H, now we mention C at the 4 level and partner is 2-2 in the black suits? Even worse if they bid 4H.

This type of hand becomes a problem hand for those who open 1S. As MikeH suggests, it would be thrown out of a master solvers problem. He is far to generous explaining that 1 in 100 experts would open 1C, I think it is more like 1 in several thousand. It's a no brianer.
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#34 User is offline   whereagles 

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Posted 2006-June-01, 08:13

Well, mcphee.. I think you're just looking at one side of the story. I guess it's just not easy to see things in various perspectives.
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#35 User is offline   mikeh 

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Posted 2006-June-01, 09:00

Big Club methods frequently require that opener, with a two-suiter longer in than in the other suit, open the shorter suit and rebid . However, this does not usually promise longer than the first suit: it merely includes the possibility of that shape. In other words, big club methods have a weakness in this area: auctions that involve these hands are more difficult in their methods than they are in standard.

This should be no surprise: if big club methods had no structural flaws, almost all good players would use one, and the majority of the expert community around the world does not.

It is also no surprise that those who use big club methods consider that the advantages afforded ON OTHER HANDS offsets the structural weaknesses (which are not limited to the issue under discusssion). Of course, all methods have structural problems: they differ from method to method but show me your system and I will show you a family of hands which will be difficult for you.

The point, to which I come at last, is that to suggest that one can open this hand 1, in a standard-based method, and then, by agreement, play that repeated bids may show longer is, to be blunt, a remarkably stupid idea.

Instead of taking advantage of a standard method's ability to bid this hand without ambiguity, we see the suggestion that we adopt one of the weaknesses of a big club system! This approach suggests trying to get the worst of both worlds.
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#36 User is offline   whereagles 

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Posted 2006-June-01, 10:00

mikeh, did you know that in French Standard (SEF)

1 1
1 2x
2

shows a black 55 with 15+? Did you also know that in SEF the 65 hands are treated as a 55? In other words, in France everybody opens the original hand 1 (except for those who upgrade it to an intermediate hand and open 1).

So the French are bidding, to use your words, in a "remarkably stupid" way.

There are pros and cons for each choice of opening, but you seem to be seeing only pros in one opening and cons in another. Quite frankly, your attitude of intolerance towards a what is a perfectly reasonable and playable choice of opening borders on the ridicule. Or perhaps it just shows ignorance of how people play outside the world.. err.. north america.
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#37 User is offline   mikeh 

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Posted 2006-June-01, 10:33

whereagles, my comment had nothing to do with SEF.... take another look. I was commenting on your remarkably stupid idea that you could adopt, in a 'standard' (your word, not mine) method the idea of opening 1 and rebidding a couple of times to show longer . Had your post been that this was normal in SEF, I'd be interested in hearing from french experts as to whether and why that is true... altho I can already see some arguments in favour of it and some against it....but of course, your post had nothing to do with SEF...nor did it distinguish hand types by high card strength... or if it did either of those things, you managed to avoid mentioning it :)

I am going to try to resist, in the future, rising to the bait offered by your posts. Your attitude that mainstream expert bridge theory is wrong wherever it contradicts your idiosyncratic notions makes discussion with you impossible: your posts rarely, if ever, offer a reasoned approach: being confined, mostly, to claims that you have the right, if not the duty, to mastermind the bidding.

Anyway, my failure to respond to or comment upon later posts by you is not a concession that your ideas are correct...merely a decision by me that your posts are not worth responding to.

Let me know if your methods ever lead you to success in the real world.
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#38 User is offline   whereagles 

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Posted 2006-June-01, 11:47

mikeh, on Jun 1 2006, 04:33 PM, said:

1.
whereagles, my comment had nothing to do with SEF.... take another look. I was commenting on your remarkably stupid idea that you could adopt, in a 'standard' (your word, not mine) method the idea of opening 1 and rebidding a couple of times to show longer . Had your post been that this was normal in SEF, I'd be interested in hearing from french experts as to whether and why that is true... altho I can already see some arguments in favour of it and some against it....but of course, your post had nothing to do with SEF...nor did it distinguish hand types by high card strength... or if it did either of those things, you managed to avoid mentioning it :)

2.
Your attitude that mainstream expert bridge theory is wrong wherever it contradicts your idiosyncratic notions makes discussion with you impossible: your posts rarely, if ever, offer a reasoned approach: being confined, mostly, to claims that you have the right, if not the duty, to mastermind the bidding.

1. I couldn't understand your point in this paragraph. Was the point to tell me that, since it's standard in sayc or 2/1 to open 1, I should have specified that my 1 opener was in the context of sef? If so, well.. mind you, you also didn't specify under which system you were advocating 1.

2. That's a completely false and manipulative statement. I've always funded my opinions and claims clearly and adequately. The fact you don't agree with my argumentation doesn't void it, nor does it make discussion impossible.
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#39 User is offline   kgr 

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Posted 2006-June-01, 15:53

kgr, on May 31 2006, 01:40 AM, said:

AQTxx
75
Void
AQxxxx

I had a discussion with a good player at the club.
You play some kind of SAYC or SEF.
MP's, your are dealer. (Vul unknown)
What do you open?

I opened 1S. The partner of the good player with who I had a discussion at the bar also opened 1S.
My opinion was that I should have opened 1C, but she diagreed and told me I should bid my 5 card M.
At our table opps remained silent and the bidding continued:
1S-2D
Suppose you were forced to bid 1S. What do you bid now and is 3C 100% forcing? Is 3C reverse? (At the bar we also didn't agree about this.). If you choose 3C, are you happy with it?
==============
If you opened 1C then the bidding would go:
1C-(1H)-2D-(2H)
What do you bid now? (Please also answer the 1S-2D question as that was the issue I faced at the table.)

Thanks,
Koen
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#40 User is offline   mike777 

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Posted 2006-June-01, 16:01

This last post really worries me.
1) Why does this player say you should open 1S? Should is a strong word!
2) I understand you are not sure if 1s=2d=3c is 100% forcing with silent opponents. This is a great question! Buy some basic bidding books and join BIL I think you will get a great deal out of it. They get these issues all the time! Bill Root has some truly wonderful books on good solid basic bidding.
3) I would stop stop taking any advice from anyplayer that says you Should or must open 1S on this hand. You can debate it, you can open 1S but saying you should or must is too strong and very wrong!
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