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Please suggest an auction

#21 User is offline   gnasher 

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Posted 2010-January-10, 18:11

whereagles, on Jan 10 2010, 11:23 PM, said:

1 1
2 2NT (meant as artificial weak, but I'm ok with it natural as well
3 pass

Surely 3 here is non-forcing opposite normal responding values? That is, it's what you'd bid with a 4-6 16-count. With his actual hand, opener would raise 2NT to 3NT.

I'm usually very reluctant to break partnership discipline, but I'm sure Justin's right about this: if you respond 1 you should pass 2.
... that would still not be conclusive proof, before someone wants to explain that to me as well as if I was a 5 year-old. - gwnn
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#22 User is offline   Jlall 

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Posted 2010-January-10, 18:26

Wow a hand gnasher will pass a forcing bid! I guess that's why gnasher would never bid 1S though :rolleyes:
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#23 User is offline   jdonn 

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Posted 2010-January-10, 19:27

I don't mind in principle passing forcing bids but I like to really be certain it's right. Maybe on this hand it is. I still want to respond to the opening, and still worry partner will be 3361 or that he will have a hand that makes game (T AKxx AKQxxx Kx, maybe some 5-6 hands) but I'm willing to compromise on passing 2 since it seems like it will usually be right.
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#24 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2010-January-10, 19:39

jdonn, on Jan 10 2010, 05:03 PM, said:

Winstonm, on Jan 10 2010, 04:37 PM, said:

There is a hole in standard-type bidding between 1-bids and really big hands and it has no good solution.

Opening the in between hands at the 1 level and responding light? Ok ok maybe I've said enough, the secret is already leaking out.

Why not play a forcing club or forcing pass system then and save the room and get the benefit of limited 1-bids?
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere."
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#25 User is offline   jdonn 

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Posted 2010-January-10, 20:00

Winstonm, on Jan 10 2010, 08:39 PM, said:

jdonn, on Jan 10 2010, 05:03 PM, said:

Winstonm, on Jan 10 2010, 04:37 PM, said:

There is a hole in standard-type bidding between 1-bids and really big hands and it has no good solution.

Opening the in between hands at the 1 level and responding light? Ok ok maybe I've said enough, the secret is already leaking out.

Why not play a forcing club or forcing pass system then and save the room and get the benefit of limited 1-bids?

I agree. See now we've got two good solutions (depending what you consider 'standard type bidding'), that'll teach you to say there are none.
Please let me know about any questions or interest or bug reports about GIB.
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#26 User is offline   Siegmund 

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Posted 2010-January-10, 22:14

There is room for debate about the gap between "two solutions" and "two good solutions." :D It's the closest I've heard to a reason for why so many people like these maniacal 3- and 4-point responses to 1-bids. The only thing super-light responding has ever gotten me is down in 2NT.

I think it's part of the appeal of the Polish club family for me. The 11-18 1-bids are "just like standard bids, with the problem strong hands removed." (Though especially with the strong 2-suiters the problem just comes back to haunt us a couple rounds later in the auction.)
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#27 User is online   Cyberyeti 

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Posted 2010-January-11, 04:05

Siegmund, on Jan 10 2010, 11:14 PM, said:

There is room for debate about the gap between "two solutions" and "two good solutions." :D It's the closest I've heard to a reason for why so many people like these maniacal 3- and 4-point responses to 1-bids. The only thing super-light responding has ever gotten me is down in 2NT.

This is the point of what I play, you don't go down in 2N on bal 18 opposite 4 because we use 1x-1y-2N as an artificial unbalanced GF, so there is no gap between our 1N rebid (we play a weak no trump) and 2N opener. Hence we're playing in 1N.

It does mean that we will occasionally play in 2N with 15 opposite 7, but that stands a much better chance than 18 opposite 4.
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#28 User is offline   whereagles 

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Posted 2010-January-11, 04:49

gnasher, on Jan 11 2010, 12:11 AM, said:

whereagles, on Jan 10 2010, 11:23 PM, said:

1 1
2 2NT (meant as artificial weak, but I'm ok with it natural as well
3 pass

Surely 3 here is non-forcing opposite normal responding values? That is, it's what you'd bid with a 4-6 16-count. With his actual hand, opener would raise 2NT to 3NT.

lol right. Silly me. 3NT is obvious, of course.

I normally wouldn't respond to 1 though... There's a bit of a difference between responding with, say, 5 cards to the ace and the actual quackish hand.
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#29 User is offline   Fluffy 

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Posted 2010-January-11, 10:44

I play that after

1-1
2-2NT (2NT = weak)

only 3 accepts a partscore, the rest are stronger.

I don't focus too much on partscores I guess :lol:


About passing a reverse... I have seen my opponents doing it 3 times in my life, and I always collected a bottom, 3 hands is not enough to judge, but m impression is that it is at least playable.
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#30 User is offline   zen 

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Posted 2010-January-12, 16:10

I agree with Jdonn

1D-1S
2H-2NT*leb
3NT

Opener is a max and the hands are misfits. I have seen much worse contracts then this one, and its tough for Opener to stop on a dime in a suit on the three level with the opening hand.

If responder passes 1D they could catch partner with:

AKQ5
5
AKJ1076
K6

And miss a perfectly good game

Or

AK74
Q8
J1054
A54

Where spades is a much better contract, and makes it more difficult for the opponents to get to their heart contract then initially passing.
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#31 User is offline   kenrexford 

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Posted 2010-January-12, 18:23

If normal stuff:

Open 1-allpass

or

Open 2-2(neg)-2NT

Sometimes you get stuck. I'm not worrying that much about a stiff spade when stuck with terrible alternatives.

With two-way strong opening structure:

Opener: 2 (strong forcing opening, 0-3 spades unless maxi-balanced 24+)
Responder: 2 (waiting)
Opener: 2 (four hearts and a longer minor OR 1-4-4-4)
Responder: 2NT (no heart fit)
Opener: 3 (four hearts, longer diamonds, not three spades)
Responder: judgment
Opener: possible judgment call

or

Opener: 2 (same)
Responder: 2 (double negative)
Opener: 3 (diamonds, 0-3 spades)
Responder: 3 (0-3 hearts, punt)
Opener: judgment
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