p p 1NT
#1
Posted 2009-July-31, 13:15
Knowing that's it getting popular my questions are:
* What are your requirements for such a bid? Especially major suit holdings.
* What would a similar approach look like, playing a WEAK NT?
* What are the good things that happened to you, what are the bad?
#2
Posted 2009-July-31, 15:46
This week I opened 1NT (14-16) on Kx Jx AKJ9x JTxx, white against red, 1st seat - but opponents still tanked their way to 4♠ making. Well, almost worked
#3
Posted 2009-July-31, 17:50
Ideally I am third seat with lots of offense and little defense. xx xx AKQxxx Axx would be a perfect hand.
Not sure I would ever upgrade by 2 points in first seat. Or did you mean a 13 count playing 14-16 like cherdano did, because that is pretty normal/fine and I agree with his answer.
edit: lol just noticed the tilte of this thread, guess you are talking about third seat. In that case its awesomeeeeeee
#4
Posted 2009-July-31, 20:20
#5
Posted 2009-August-01, 00:49
One incident occurred at world juniors a few years ago playing against the USA. At the time we were playing a non-penalty double of 3rd seat 'strong' NT. Grue/Kranyak (i think?) opened a 'strong' NT in 3rd seat about 4 times in the match and didn't once have a full opening bid. My memory is a bit hazy but I think they brought home a no-play 3NT with 12 opposite 10 on mis-defence and then later in the match responder didn't even invite with a bad 9. I felt the whole thing was pretty unethical.
I confronted them about it after the match (in a friendly way) and got the 'it's just bridge' response. In an international event where styles vary heavily from country to country they could've been a lot more transparent about their agreements.
Light 3rd seat NT openings have become more popular in Australia since then. These days I usually treat a 3rd seat NT as weak (with penalty doubles and a constructive overcall structure focused around majors). I've found this solves a lot of the problems.
<edited to change to the tone of the post>
#6
Posted 2009-August-01, 02:32
George Carlin
#7
Posted 2009-August-01, 03:22
I've changed the post slightly to refect this.
#8
Posted 2009-August-01, 04:43
I think you really need to disclose such tendencies in a regular partnership, and formalize it (making aggressive upgrades mandatory in certain well-defined situations) to avoid the "loop" discussed in Fred's law thread.
#9
Posted 2009-August-01, 04:52
I agree that these 3rd seat NT bids should definitely be alerted. It soulds like the pair in question had a private agreement.
#10
Posted 2009-August-01, 05:09
1NT passed out?
1NT transfer, accepted, passed out?
p p 1NT p 2NT
or worse Stayman then 2NT
Can you run into 3m?
#11
Posted 2009-August-01, 07:35
Gerben42, on Aug 1 2009, 06:09 AM, said:
1NT passed out?
-I'm not down yet.
1NT transfer, accepted, passed out?
-I'm not down yet
p p 1NT p 2NT
-How's this bad?
or worse Stayman then 2NT
-How's this bad either?
Can you run into 3m?
-You can, if you really want to.
-P.J. Painter.
#12
Posted 2009-August-02, 04:14
-How's this bad?
or worse Stayman then 2NT
-How's this bad either?
You are kidding, aren't you Ken? Both of these are likely bad for your side.
#13
Posted 2009-August-02, 05:44
What I wonder most about: what if opps interfere? Do we lose a lot?
#14
Posted 2009-August-02, 06:09
Free, on Aug 2 2009, 12:44 PM, said:
Don't think so. They bid less accurately than after a 1m opening, and partner is better placed after our 1NT opening than after our 1m opening. (assuming we play 5-card majors).
#15
Posted 2009-August-02, 07:23
These hands are actually worth a 1NT opening in terms of "offensive value" -- they just lack the normal amount of defense. If partner bids game you will usually end up having pretty good play (and in fact these games can be hard to reach otherwise). If partner passes or transfers or invites you usually do okay (although 2-minor is often a better partial). Sometimes opponents also have game and it is hard for them to get in (especially if LHO has a strong notrump and they don't play penalty doubles).
If the opponents interfere, it depends on your methods and how much partner is "in on the joke." The worst thing that happens is that partner penalty doubles them in something when an opponent is short in opener's minor and they make. Playing takeout doubles instead of penalty after an overcall helps here (partner passes hoping you reopen and you just pass it out for example). If partner will understand the hand type you have if/when you bid 3m freely later on that will help. And if partner tends to be suspicious when the opponents freely bid a game after your strong notrump opening and not double unless he pretty much has them beat in his own hand (i.e. believes the opponents bidding more than partner's 3rd seat 1NT open) that will also help.
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#16
Posted 2009-August-02, 10:21
You do tend to lose when partner signs off in two of a major in a 5-2 fit. Although that sometimes gains by getting you to a higher-scoring partscore, it's more likely that two of the major will go down when you could make two or three of the minor.
If they intervene and partner tries to penalise them, I think you should overrule him. My typical hand for this type of action would be Kx Qx AKJxxx xxx, and that doesn't have anything like as much defensive strength as partner will expect.
Finally, I don't think this tactic should be restricted to third-seat openings. I do it routinely in all positions. I'm particularly inclined to do it against people who play DONT, Cappelletti, or anything else that includes multi-style overcalls.
#17
Posted 2009-August-02, 12:10
The_Hog, on Aug 2 2009, 05:14 AM, said:
-How's this bad?
or worse Stayman then 2NT
-How's this bad either?
You are kidding, aren't you Ken? Both of these are likely bad for your side.
I don't get it.
If I open 1NT because I think that I have a better playing hand in a notrump contract than would be obvious on the face of a HCP analysis, why would I be upset if partner then raises that notrump contract?
I generally do not like to open 1NT with the idea being that I desperately do not want to play a notrump contract. Maybe that's just me.
So, if I upgrade, I do so with that thought in mind.
-P.J. Painter.
#18
Posted 2009-August-03, 01:09
Gerben42, on Aug 1 2009, 06:09 AM, said:
1NT passed out?
1NT transfer, accepted, passed out?
p p 1NT p 2NT
or worse Stayman then 2NT
Can you run into 3m?
Over an invite, you of course just bid 3N, hoping to run you 6 card suit and get three somewhere else. They might not realize it when you are stealing your 9th trick
#19
Posted 2009-August-03, 05:18
awm, on Aug 3 2009, 01:23 AM, said:
There is a potential regulatory problem if you open some 12 counts and some 17 counts 1NT in that most of the world seem to think this is a six-point range and therefore subject to ACBL regulations requiring that you do not play any conventions thereafter.
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
#20
Posted 2009-August-03, 07:42
Cascade, on Aug 3 2009, 12:18 PM, said:
awm, on Aug 3 2009, 01:23 AM, said:
There is a potential regulatory problem if you open some 12 counts and some 17 counts 1NT in that most of the world seem to think this is a six-point range and therefore subject to ACBL regulations requiring that you do not play any conventions thereafter.
It's only a problem if you are playing in the ACBL

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