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Spades-showing "weak" twos in 4th seat

#1 User is offline   JLilly 

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Posted 2017-July-19, 03:50

Hi all,

For systems with six-card weak twos, the plurality treatment of openings of 2// in fourth seat seems to be to bump up the HCP requirement a bit, to 10~13 points. But if you open in or , doesn't this cry out for your opponents to jump back in with a near-opening higher suit, knowing that the odds are that your side is relatively short in spades (and also hearts if you open 2)? The calculus for them is now (a) you likely have the fit and the points for a two-level partscore, so it's worth them competing even if they go down one or two, and (b) their odds of having a higher-suit fit are enhanced and so maybe they really should be in 2M.

Does anyone who normally plays standard six-card weak twos use a different structure for opening in fourth seat, based on showing spades / keeping opps from overcalling with spades? Something like:

2 = 6+ spades
2 = 5+ hearts and 4 spades; (or 6+ hearts and 5 spades)
2 = 5+ diamonds and 4 spades;
. . . . or perhaps the full three-suiter: (3)4+ diamonds, 4+ hearts, and 4 spades;
. . . . or maybe any 3-suiter with spades (is this GCC illegal if you want conventional responses like an asking 2NT or game-tries?)

Using the Rule of 15, the HCP requirements would be:

2 = 6+ spades 9-12 HCP
2 = 5+ hearts and 4 spades 11-14 HCP (by happenstance making this essentially Flannery 2H)
2 = 5+ diamonds and 4 spades; 11-14 HCP

The 5Y/4S distributions are about half as frequent as the 6Y distributions, but opening in fourth seat announcing that you're short in spades seems dangerous to me, especially if opps are NV.
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#2 User is offline   steve2005 

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Posted 2017-July-19, 05:46

Your assumption that if you open 2/2 you will be short in / is flawed.
Yes opener is unlikely to have side 4-card major but can easily have 3 cards. Also, you can not make any assumption about opener's partner they can have most any number of cards though 6 or higher less likely.
Opener's side is not guaranteed to have a fit. If they were guaranteed a fit you would be protected by the law of total tricks for an action like a takeout double or an overcall.

Your method is not necessarily bad.
Sarcasm is a state of mind
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#3 User is offline   The_Badger 

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Posted 2017-July-19, 07:38

My take on this is play whatever you feel comfortable with, but as is the anchor (top) suit and two opponents have already passed, is there any point using the 2 or 2 bids as Flannery/Fantunes-styled bids with a four card suit in 4th? If you have a fit you have the top trump suit, and can't that be shown by normal methods?

I'm more in favour of 4th position 'weak twos' as intermediate weak twos 11-14(15) with a good six card suit and showing (at your discretion) maybe 3 out of 4 top honours, etc., and maybe bidding a tight game opposite a passed partner.
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