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Polish Club - restricting Precision 2C to 6+ clubs
#1
Posted 2004-February-19, 23:43
Many/most Precision players have found it advantageous to restrict the 2C opening to hands with 6+ clubs.
What are the reactions to doing the same in the Polish Club?
Hands with 5 clubs and a 4-card major would be opened 1C. One scheme is to bid these 5 clubs and 4-card major hands the same way that you would bid if you had a 4441 or as balanced if partner bids your shortness. For example:
Over 1C-1D, bid your 4-card major.
Over 1C-1M: if partner bids your 4-card major, raise to 2 or 3 depending on your strength. With 5341 hands and partner bids something other than your 4-card major, bid 1S holding 4 spades, 1NT with a singleton in partner's M, or raise partner's major even though you have only 3-card support. With 5422, raise the major or bid NT.
Over 1C-1NT, opener has the same ugly choice as with 4441 hands.
Etc.
The weakness is that when opener makes a rebid showing a balanced hand, then the club suit is suppressed. Offsetting this, 4-4 major fits will not be missed.
I feel sure that some experienced Polish Club players have experimented with this and would like their reactions.
Thanks for any help you can provide.
What are the reactions to doing the same in the Polish Club?
Hands with 5 clubs and a 4-card major would be opened 1C. One scheme is to bid these 5 clubs and 4-card major hands the same way that you would bid if you had a 4441 or as balanced if partner bids your shortness. For example:
Over 1C-1D, bid your 4-card major.
Over 1C-1M: if partner bids your 4-card major, raise to 2 or 3 depending on your strength. With 5341 hands and partner bids something other than your 4-card major, bid 1S holding 4 spades, 1NT with a singleton in partner's M, or raise partner's major even though you have only 3-card support. With 5422, raise the major or bid NT.
Over 1C-1NT, opener has the same ugly choice as with 4441 hands.
Etc.
The weakness is that when opener makes a rebid showing a balanced hand, then the club suit is suppressed. Offsetting this, 4-4 major fits will not be missed.
I feel sure that some experienced Polish Club players have experimented with this and would like their reactions.
Thanks for any help you can provide.
#2
Posted 2004-February-20, 00:12
Hands with 5 clubs and a 4-card major would be opened 1C. One scheme is to bid these 5 clubs and 4-card major hands the same way that you would bid if you had a 4441 or as balanced if partner bids your shortness. For example:
Over 1C-1D, bid your 4-card major.
The problem with this approach is a further lack of definition in the 1C opening. Don't forget that a 1D response can contain various strong hands as well as interm strength minor suit hands. I can't really see how you would be able to sort out what opener has, especially with some intervention.
Why don't you have a look at Strefa, which is similar to Polish club, but has a 2C GF opening. 1C openings are now 12-14 balanced, 18-23 balanced or 12-22 with Cs.
Over 1C-1D, bid your 4-card major.
The problem with this approach is a further lack of definition in the 1C opening. Don't forget that a 1D response can contain various strong hands as well as interm strength minor suit hands. I can't really see how you would be able to sort out what opener has, especially with some intervention.
Why don't you have a look at Strefa, which is similar to Polish club, but has a 2C GF opening. 1C openings are now 12-14 balanced, 18-23 balanced or 12-22 with Cs.
"The King of Hearts a broadsword bears, the Queen of Hearts a rose." W. H. Auden.
#3
Posted 2004-February-20, 04:34
This is a good idea if you discuss what to do with unbalanced 11 - 15 5♣ + 4♥ after 1♣ - 1♠. The 4-4-1-4 hand is not really a problem unless partner bids 1NT in which case you pass or invite.
One possibility is to use the AUC structure, or something nearer to PC:
1♣ - 1♠ - ?
2♣ = 11-15, 5♣ + 4♥
2♦ = Relay, almost always invitational
2♥ = Odwrotka (GF 3+♠)
1♣ - 1♠ - 2♦ - 2♥ - ?
2♠ = Invitational, 3♠ (and therefore at least 5♣)
2NT = Invitational Reverse without 3♠
3♣ = Invitational 6+♣
3♦, 3♥, 3♠: GF 2-suiters without ♠
After 1♣ - 1♦ you rebid 1 of your 4-card major with the 5-4 hands and responder will now let you know if he has one of the stronger variants, so no problem there either.
One possibility is to use the AUC structure, or something nearer to PC:
1♣ - 1♠ - ?
2♣ = 11-15, 5♣ + 4♥
2♦ = Relay, almost always invitational
2♥ = Odwrotka (GF 3+♠)
1♣ - 1♠ - 2♦ - 2♥ - ?
2♠ = Invitational, 3♠ (and therefore at least 5♣)
2NT = Invitational Reverse without 3♠
3♣ = Invitational 6+♣
3♦, 3♥, 3♠: GF 2-suiters without ♠
After 1♣ - 1♦ you rebid 1 of your 4-card major with the 5-4 hands and responder will now let you know if he has one of the stronger variants, so no problem there either.
Two wrongs don't make a right, but three lefts do!
#4
Posted 2004-February-20, 17:22
cwiggins, on Feb 20 2004, 02:43 AM, said:
Many/most Precision players have found it advantageous to restrict the 2C opening to hands with 6+ clubs.
Less disadvantageous would be a better description.
The 2♣ opening is certainly one of the disadvantages of a strong club system or Polish club system.
The standard systems have a big advantage when the bidding goes
1♣ 1Major ...
when on the same hand the strong clubbers are starting with
2♣ ?
Two problems can occur:
You can miss your major by not bidding
OR
you can wind the auction up too high by introducing your major.
Restricting the 2♣ opening to six-card suits only counters this disadvantage by reducing the frequency of the problems.
You open 2♣ less often and you want to move to another flavour less often when partner guarantees a six-bagger.
Wayne
Wayne Burrows
I believe that the USA currently hold only the World Championship For People Who Still Bid Like Your Auntie Gladys - dburn
dunno how to play 4 card majors - JLOGIC
True but I know Standard American and what better reason could I have for playing Precision? - Hideous Hog
Bidding is an estimation of probabilities SJ Simon
I believe that the USA currently hold only the World Championship For People Who Still Bid Like Your Auntie Gladys - dburn
dunno how to play 4 card majors - JLOGIC
True but I know Standard American and what better reason could I have for playing Precision? - Hideous Hog
Bidding is an estimation of probabilities SJ Simon
#5
Posted 2004-February-20, 17:31
Cascade, on Feb 20 2004, 06:22 PM, said:
cwiggins, on Feb 20 2004, 02:43 AM, said:
Many/most Precision players have found it advantageous to restrict the 2C opening to hands with 6+ clubs.
Less disadvantageous would be a better description.
The 2♣ opening is certainly one of the disadvantages of a strong club system or Polish club system.
Well.... I got to where I thought my 2♣ auctions was one of the stronger part of my precision system I use to play (caveat, I generally don't play it anymore). What I found the problem with precision was...
1) the nebulous ♦ - never knowing when to bid to the limit,
2) the limit range of parnter - A double edge sword, but they kept counting us out on Defense
3) Effective preemption against our 1♣ auction before we had a chance to show suit(s) and general range.
Now, of course there is a lot of merit to 1♣ artificial and strong...too.... I don't mean this as a general slam of the system. Many I was replying to the comment about 2♣... btw, in Power Precison, Sontag also says that he thinks the 2♣ opening bids is one of the strongest parts of their system, not one of the weaker (they also require a fairly good six card suit).
Ben
--Ben--
#6
Posted 2004-February-20, 18:31
Cascade, on Feb 20 2004, 11:22 PM, said:
cwiggins, on Feb 20 2004, 02:43 AM, said:
Many/most Precision players have found it advantageous to restrict the 2C opening to hands with 6+ clubs.
Less disadvantageous would be a better description.
Less disadvantageous if the bid is considered by itself--but you have your choice of losses elsewhere:
- Use a nebulous 1♦ that could be a doubleton and the Precision 2♦
- Use a super-nebulous 1♦ that could be a void.
The first alternative causes some losses on the 1♦ hands and uses 2♦ for a low frequency opening when it might do good service in your preemptive system.
The second alternative causes greater losses on the 1♦ hands.
If your 2♣ structure allows you to get out in two of a major on a 4-3 fit, you can get some of the 2♣ losses back.
My style:
- Don't be afraid to open 2♣ on five.
- Have 1♦ promise 4.
- Open 4=4=1=4 hands 1♥. It's too infrequent to cause significant loss on our 1♥ hands.
Many will not agree with me in the context of Precision, and in Polish, there will be different tradeoffs. I'm hoping to show the kind of analysis that is needed.
#7
Posted 2004-February-20, 19:17
Precision Today proposes both 5-4's and 6+ club suit with a strong bias towards the latter. With pard and I it depends on scoring - MPs we lean towards 5-4's, IMPs towards six carders.
"Champions aren't made in gyms, champions are made from something they have deep inside them - a desire, a dream, a vision. They have to have last-minute stamina, they have to be a little faster, they have to have the skill and the will. But the will must be stronger than the skill. " - M. Ali
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