Minor suits over 15-17 NT
#1
Posted 2011-June-23, 13:15
Which of these, if any, is recommended for a non-expert partnership? Are there other recommended treatments for minor suits and/or the 2♠ response to a 1NT opening?
#2
Posted 2011-June-23, 13:25
First: 2S is a transfer to clubs, 2NT is a transfer to D or a weak hand with 5-5+ in the minors. Opener bids the in-between step to say he doesn't like the minor.
Second: 2S is either a balanced hand with invitational values or a hand with clubs. Opener bids 2NT with a minimum and responder passes with the invitational balanced hand or bids at the 3-level to show hands with clubs (3C being a weak hand). With a maximum, opener bids 3C and responder passes with weak hand with clubs and bids again with either the balanced hand or with strong club hands. I play 2NT as a transfer to D or the weak 5-5 minors hand with this as well.
For the sake of completion, I also play 3C is a puppet stayman with an ambiguous 3D response; I play 3D as 5+5+ minors and GF (opener bids 3H/3S to show C/D support respectively; 3M shows a stiff in that major, 3 in the other major, and 5-4 or 4-5 in the minors with GF+ strength.
ETA: I would consider these agreements to be for sort of advanced partnerships, but in general I think it's easy enough to learn that it's fine, and also I think they're good agreements, so they're worth the extra work, imo.
Another late edit, sorry. To clarify: in the second version where 2S is either clubs or balanced invite, the balanced invite denies a 4-card Major. With a 4-card major you bid stayman.
This post has been edited by jjbrr: 2011-June-23, 14:37
bed
#3
Posted 2011-June-23, 13:54
If you want, put both minors weak in 2♠ too and have opener bid 2NT without good clubs and 3♣ with good clubs, so 3♦ over 2NT is to play. This loses the ability to play 1N-2S;2N-3D as diamond shortness, so your choice.
If you're okay with remembering 2NT isn't natural, what jjbrr has is good.
#4
Posted 2011-June-23, 15:45
George Carlin
#5
Posted 2011-June-23, 23:09
jjbrr, on 2011-June-23, 13:25, said:
Dont quite understand this. How is the transfer completed? Can you explain please?
Thank you.
Kamal
#6
Posted 2011-June-23, 23:23
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
Our ultimate goal on defense is to know by trick two or three everyone's hand at the table. -- Mike777
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#7
Posted 2011-June-23, 23:28
#8
Posted 2011-June-23, 23:39
1NT-2♠ is a relay to 3♣, showing one minor or the other
... if responder has a weak hand with clubs, he passes
... if responder has a weak hand with diamonds, he corrects to 3♦
... if responder has a slam invite hand with clubs, he bids 3♥
... if responder has a slam invite hand with diamonds, he bids 3♠.
1N-2N/3♣/3♦ are all natural and game invitational.
#9
Posted 2011-June-24, 00:04
KamalK, on 2011-June-23, 23:09, said:
Thank you.
Kamal
Hi Kamal.
In the context of a structure with 4-suit transfers, the bids look something like this:
1NT-2♠: 2♠ shows any hand with long clubs that would at least prefer suggesting ♣ as strain instead of NT. Opener can either say he likes clubs or he doesn't like clubs. The distinction is up to you and your partner; I like partner to say "I like clubs" with Hxx and an otherwise normal 1NT opener (because when I transfer to clubs I almost always have a 6-card suit, and Hxx opposite a 6-card suit frequently produces at least 5 tricks).
After 2♠ showing ♣: 2NT says opener has worse than like Hxx. You might agree something like Ax or Kx is enough to say "I like your suit" in this spot. If opener and responder have less than standard values for a game and a suit that doesn't fit very well, we might suffer too many losers. If they fit well, even with a HCP total well below 26, they could easily have 9 tricks given the good fit in the minor. It's all a matter of judgment.
After 2NT showing ♦: all the same rules apply. Again, I'd like to emphasize this point: you don't get a game bonus for having 26 combined HCP. You get a game bonus for bidding and making game. If you can diagnose that you have a strong fit likely to take 5 or 6 tricks, you can bid 3NT on lighter combined HCP.
Does that help?
bed
#10
Posted 2011-June-24, 00:30
jjbrr, on 2011-June-24, 00:04, said:
Does that help?
JJ thank you very much for detailed expl. We've tried but often realised we shd be in 2NT. Minors giving problems
I guess I will have to 'construct' a hand and once again see how to go about it as per your expl.
Thanks again. Kamal
#11
Posted 2011-June-24, 01:32
Bbradley62, on 2011-June-23, 23:39, said:
1NT-2♠ is a relay to 3♣, showing one minor or the other
... if responder has a weak hand with clubs, he passes
... if responder has a weak hand with diamonds, he corrects to 3♦
... if responder has a slam invite hand with clubs, he bids 3♥
... if responder has a slam invite hand with diamonds, he bids 3♠.
1N-2N/3♣/3♦ are all natural and game invitational.
Thanks, I suppose this is easier for us at Intermediate/Advancing Inter level.
Now I have 2 further queries. We often mess up even after having established trumps in minor suits. We either play in 3 level and miss 5 or play in 5 missing slam. Or often blindly bid 5/6. So then :
1. 3♥/ 3♠ is not cue bids, right? Just a slam showing interest? How do you take it forward after 3♥/3♠?
2. Playing reg BW what next? and playing RKC1430 whats next?
Sorry, I know these are too many queries but glad this topic came up as we seem lost in minor games/slams.
If you suggest can post a fresh topic if this thread gets messed with the somewhat unrelated queries.
Thanks. Kamal
#12
Posted 2011-June-24, 01:57
KamalK, on 2011-June-24, 01:32, said:
Now I have 2 further queries. We often mess up even after having established trumps in minor suits. We either play in 3 level and miss 5 or play in 5 missing slam. Or often blindly bid 5/6. So then :
Seems you are leaving the 'Beginner' space, so I suggest you look into 'Minorwood'.
Using 4m to ask about aces and trump Q, makes it easier to stop in 5m.
And remember asking about aces is to avoid bidding a slam, if 2 keycards are missing, you only use it after you decided to try a slam.
Using it to investigate the slam chances is an abuse.
#13
Posted 2011-June-24, 02:35
Antrax, on 2011-June-23, 23:28, said:
The way most people play it:
responder's 2NT denies 4 spades. he bids 2♠ (forcing 1 round) when he has 4 spades.
George Carlin
#14
Posted 2011-June-24, 03:17
#15
Posted 2011-June-24, 03:26
Also I think there are other people who play (1NT-2♣; 2♥-) 2♠ as NF, invitational only, with 3NT still showing spades as with no 4SF. I think being able to stop in 2M is super awesome, even if played from the weak hand.
George Carlin
#16
Posted 2011-June-24, 06:54
KamalK, on 2011-June-24, 01:32, said:
I think most people play 3♥/3♠ after a minor suit transfer as showing shortness. You don't necessarily need to be slam interested yet, it can also help to decide whether 3NT or 5m is right (if opener has lots of honors opposite the shortness, 3NT is likely to be better, whereas a bare ace or nothing at all would tend to indicate 5m). If opener prefers the minor he should only bid 4m though to allow a slam-interested responder to cuebid. Similarily, if responder bids on after opener bids 3NT, it's a cuebidding sequence.
-- Bertrand Russell
#17
Posted 2011-June-24, 15:35
-- Long Cl
-- Long Diam
-- Both minors ( 4+/5 either way )
----- weak
----- strong
----- invitational
The following structure covers all bases, but may not be the best:
Long Cl
1 -- weak [ 1NT - 2NT! ( forces 3C! ), 3C! - pass ]
2 -- strong [ 1NT - 2NT! ( forces 3C! ) , 3H/3S advance cue for long Cl as trump ]
3 -- invitational [ 1NT - 3C ]
Long Diam
4 -- weak [ 1NT - 2S! ( MSS ) ]
5 -- strong [ 1NT - 2NT! ( forces 3C! ) - 3D! = long Diam ]
6 -- invitational ( 1NT - 3D ]
Both Minors ( 4+/5 either way )
7 -- accept Cl
b) strong [ ditto ]
c) invitational [ 1NT - 2C, 2any - 2NT! = no 4 card Major; may be 4+/5 in minors ]
8 -- accept Diam
b) strong [ ditto ]
c) invitational [ 1NT - 2C, 2any - 2NT! = no 4 card Major; may be 4+/5 in minors ]
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
MSS = Minor Suit Stayman
TWOferBRIDGE
"imo by far in bridge the least understood concept is how to bid over a jump-shift
( 1M-1NT!-3m-?? )." ....Justin Lall
" Did someone mention relays? " .... Zelandakh
K-Rex to Mikeh : " Sometimes you drive me nuts " .
#18
Posted 2011-June-24, 16:05
TWO4BRIDGE, on 2011-June-24, 15:35, said:
Long Cl
3 -- invitational [ 1NT - 3C ]
Long Diam
6 -- invitational ( 1NT - 3D ]
These aren't necessary if you are playing 4-suit transfers. You just transfer and bid 3NT if partner likes it. If your suit is solid or semi-solid with an entry, just bid 3NT initially unless you are interested in a slam.
#19
Posted 2011-June-24, 16:33
1NT-1♣
2♥-3♦*
can now be four spades and four+ diamonds, but also it could be 5-5 or 5-4 minors, or diamonds only. It helps a little to play
1NT-1♣
2♥-2♠*
as forcing, but on the other hand, as gwnn says, it is awesome to be able to stop in 2♠.
You can of course put some strong minor suit hands into the 2♠ response (I am assuming the 2♠ usually means a weak hand with one or both** minors). Maybe something like
1NT-2♠
3♣-3M*
showing 5-5 minors and shortness in the suit bid, just to take some of the strong hands out of Stayman. Not sure this is really worth discussing in a non-expert partnership, I suppose this rant mainly serves to show that if you want to bid the strong minor suit hands effectively you are best off playing four suit transfers.
** Yes, if you play 1NT-2♠ as weak with one minor you might as well agree that it can also be weak with both minors. Opener bids 3♣ with club preference or no preference, responder can still correct to 3♦. With diamond preference, opener responds 2NT.
#20
Posted 2011-June-24, 17:29
Vampyr, on 2011-June-24, 16:05, said:
Thx.... but,how to you handle the "both minors" cases when playing 4-suit transfers, ?
TWOferBRIDGE
"imo by far in bridge the least understood concept is how to bid over a jump-shift
( 1M-1NT!-3m-?? )." ....Justin Lall
" Did someone mention relays? " .... Zelandakh
K-Rex to Mikeh : " Sometimes you drive me nuts " .

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