Describe this bid. A question I've always wanted to ask.
#1
Posted 2006-July-22, 13:28
So, you're in a tournament, against a nice couple from Poland. Your partner opens 1 !C, you respond 1 !D. The next player asks you what 1 !D means. For her, 'standard' means 0+ diamonds, 0+ hcp, no 5 card major, so that's not an option.
How would you explain your bid?
#2
Posted 2006-July-22, 13:55
#3
Posted 2006-July-22, 14:38
Could 1D be a 3 card suit?
If it shows a 4 carder, but denies a 4 card mayor
if being 4-4, then I would sugest
natural, with 4D and 4M we bid the mayor, if weak.
With kind regards
Marlowe
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#4
Posted 2006-July-22, 16:19
The short one word description, that is not adequate is "Walsh" nor is "natural" adequate if they ask. Nor is "just bridge" or is "hey, I play 2/1, you should know what it is so bugger off", or "learn to play bridge it is not up to me to tell you the meaning of standard bids". This isn't being polite, this is providing full disclosure...
#5
Posted 2006-July-22, 16:46
"4+ diamonds, denies a 4-card major unless invitational or better"
because that's the way I play it.
#6
Posted 2006-August-01, 09:30
Partner opens 1♣. You have:
♠AQ5
♥KJ5
♦JT
♣AJ943
Your partner, first seat, opens 1♣. What is your call? Not playing inverted minors.
#7
Posted 2006-August-01, 09:54
I bid whatever my forcing minor suit raise is, and if I don't have one I bid 3NT.
#8
Posted 2006-August-01, 11:20
mr1303, on Aug 1 2006, 10:54 AM, said:
me too
#9
Posted 2006-August-01, 11:30
jtfanclub, on Aug 1 2006, 04:30 PM, said:
Partner opens 1♣. You have:
♠AQ5
♥KJ5
♦JT
♣AJ943
Your partner, first seat, opens 1♣. What is your call? Not playing inverted minors.
If I'm really playing SAYC, then I believe 3C is forcing, so I bid that.
#10
Posted 2006-August-01, 14:03
luke warm, on Aug 1 2006, 12:20 PM, said:
mr1303, on Aug 1 2006, 10:54 AM, said:
me too
me three.
So many experts, not enough X cards.
#11
Posted 2006-August-01, 20:25
FrancesHinden, on Aug 1 2006, 12:30 PM, said:
jtfanclub, on Aug 1 2006, 04:30 PM, said:
Partner opens 1♣. You have:
♠AQ5
♥KJ5
♦JT
♣AJ943
Your partner, first seat, opens 1♣. What is your call? Not playing inverted minors.
If I'm really playing SAYC, then I believe 3C is forcing, so I bid that.
I believe that SAYC, unfortunately has no forcing minor raise ! Every place that I checked has 1C-3C limit in SAYC. http://www.acbl.org/...y/sayc_book.pdf
I really don't know how anyone bids hands to their maximum potential w/out playing invm, or putting in something for a forcing minor raise !!
A SAYC-Modern card would be useful, and it could include invm and 4SF to game for starters. (well 4SF is at least played as forcing by most)
So on the followup hand, you are really stuck. In SAYC the jump from 1m to 3NT is supposed to show 16-17 HCP. You have 16..so that bid is fine except for the fact you may miss a club slam or the opps may run 5+ diamond tricks.
So if you try to tell a lie and bid 1D at least you can here PD's rebid and on a really good day it may be 2C, but you still cannot be sure of club slam or finding one with getting overboard in SAYC. Maybe by bidding 1D you can avoid a D lead when you call 3NT next.
Anyhow..without invm or at least some way to show a forcing minor raise, you really are left guessing and hoping here.
Just my opinion .. neilkaz ..
#12
Posted 2006-August-01, 21:26
-P.J. Painter.
#13
Posted 2006-August-01, 22:33
This is the price you pay for playing a simple system. SAYC requires little learning, but has many gaps. This is one of them: No forcing minor raise.
Don't worry about missing a minor suit slam, because SAYC does not have the tools to investigate for it, anyway.
The lack of a diam stopper is no concern, of course.
#14
Posted 2006-August-01, 23:39
FrancesHinden, on Aug 1 2006, 12:30 PM, said:
I believe so, too. 3NT is the second choice.
#15
Posted 2006-August-02, 15:30
where you find the unequivaical statement : "There is no forcing minor suit raise." I don't like it, but that's what it says. I suppose you could say that's just the acbl's opinion about how to play SAYC.
Playing undiscussed SAYC leads to some strange events. The other day I felt like playing a few hands so I logged on and went to the "send me to a game" button. Partner opened a diamond, I had a 16 count with five diamonds. Who knows? Beats me. No forcing diamond bid. I bid 3NT. Partner bid 4C. I bid 6D. Partner left the table. Her replacement came in and made 6D. SAYC is not a system for people who like scientific bidding.
Ken
#16
Posted 2006-August-02, 21:45
#17
Posted 2006-August-03, 03:02
#18
Posted 2006-August-04, 07:40
whereagles, on Aug 3 2006, 04:02 AM, said:
That's fair. I was playing with somebody considerably better than me, and I called 1♦, because I could't find a better bid. When the hand was over, I asked what my correct call was, and she said 1♦ was the correct call. Which made me wonder...if the correct call with the 'hole' hand is to invent a suit (and the suit you're going to invent is almost certainly diamonds, since partner is less likely to get excited and insist on that suit than a major), shouldn't that be part of the explanation?
But it sounds like inventing a suit for this hand is not Standard after all.
#19
Posted 2006-August-04, 10:37
jtfanclub, on Aug 4 2006, 08:40 AM, said:
whereagles, on Aug 3 2006, 04:02 AM, said:
That's fair. I was playing with somebody considerably better than me, and I called 1♦, because I could't find a better bid. When the hand was over, I asked what my correct call was, and she said 1♦ was the correct call. Which made me wonder...if the correct call with the 'hole' hand is to invent a suit (and the suit you're going to invent is almost certainly diamonds, since partner is less likely to get excited and insist on that suit than a major), shouldn't that be part of the explanation?
But it sounds like inventing a suit for this hand is not Standard after all.
If bridge is truly to be a game of fully disclosed methods then yes, 1C-1D should probably be alerted in SAYC. Actually, even if 1C-3C were forcing, then 1C-1D should be alerted since with 11 highs and 3-3-2-5 shape you would have no call (since 2NT shows 13-15 in SAYC). This alert is never given, in my experience. Not by me, not by anyone. I think a stronger case can be made for an alert here than in many situations where one is required, but I don't do it. Mostly because it is fairly rare for the situation to arise, so it seems like a lot of extra talk to little effect. If the powers that be wish me to start alerting it, I will happily do so. Actually I hope these powers will comment, as it's a point that should be settled.
SAYC is a simple system, described in a small number of pages. Naturally there are gaps, and the solutions to gaps tend to become, over time, known methods. It seems to be the same for virtuually all systems, but the fact remains it is an implied agreement when you agree to play SAYC that somtimes the auction will go 1C-1D without four diamonds and maybe without three. Not often, but it happens.
Ken
#20
Posted 2006-August-04, 21:38
kenberg, on Aug 4 2006, 11:37 AM, said:
So in SAYC with a good 3307 shape opposite a 1♣ opener, if you can't bid blackwood you're supposed to make up a suit? Is that suit supposed to be diamonds?

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