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Natural redouble

#1 User is offline   DavidKok 

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Posted 2020-September-20, 12:29

I recently made a mistake about the meaning of a redouble (by me) on the auction 1-(X)-?. I was under the impression that generally an XX here shows around 11+ points and shows values in all unbid suits, denying heart length or an own long suit. This sets up penalty doubles for both partner and me, even on the 1-level. After the auction I learned that not only can a redouble be played as any 11+-point hand (intending to jump in on the next round with a fit?), but also this is actually the explanation in my system notes. Oops.

This error made me question everything I 'know' about continuations after a redouble. I am very curious what your thoughts are on the following questions/problems.

  • After 1-(X)-?, are 1/2/2 forcing (if you play these as natural)?
  • After for example 1-(X)-XX-(2); P-(P)-? is 2 (strongly) invitational with around 11 points and three-card heart support, or does it show mild preference to hearts over defending diamonds if partner cannot double?
  • If partner bids a new suit, for example 1-(X)-XX-(1); 2-(P)-? is this new bid forcing? Presumably passing 1 was forcing, so bidding with weak hands seems questionable (as it solves the opponent's problems).
  • After 1-(X)-?, what would a jump shift (2/3/3) show? Forcing fitjumps?
  • Assume you also double with shapely hands (perhaps you don't have a choice with strong hands, with direct bids NF and jumps as fitbids). After 1-(X)-XX-(2); P-(P)-? is 3 forcing (and therefore practically game forcing)? Do you play Good/Bad 2NT, or some flavour of Lebensohl, here? 2 is explained as preemptive.
  • What is your personal preference for the meaning of redouble after 1-(X)-?
  • Does any of this change if partner opened 1 or 1m instead?
  • Do any of your agreements depend on the vulnerability?

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#2 User is offline   TylerE 

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Posted 2020-September-20, 13:58

1. One round force if unpassed, NF BPH
2. Redouble DENIES A FIT unless dealing with slam force type values
3. New suits are forcing.
4. Whatever you agree, not sure there really is a standard

6. 10+, denies a fit unless uber-strong
7. No
8. Not really
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#3 User is offline   nige1 

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Posted 2020-September-20, 14:15

View PostDavidKok, on 2020-September-20, 12:29, said:

1. After 1-(X)-?, are 1/2/2 forcing (if you play these as natural)?
1. F/1.

View PostDavidKok, on 2020-September-20, 12:29, said:

2. After for example 1-(X)-XX-(2); P-(P)-? is 2 (strongly) invitational with around 11 points and three-card heart support, or does it show mild preference to hearts over defending diamonds if partner cannot double?
2. The latter.

View PostDavidKok, on 2020-September-20, 12:29, said:

3a. If partner bids a new suit, for example 1-(X)-XX-(1); 2-(P)-? is this new bid forcing?
3a. No. Weak.

View PostDavidKok, on 2020-September-20, 12:29, said:

3b. Presumably passing 1 was forcing, so bidding with weak hands seems questionable (as it solves the opponent's problems). After 1-(X)-?, what would a jump shift (2/3/3) show? Forcing fitjumps?
3b. F/J.

View PostDavidKok, on 2020-September-20, 12:29, said:

4. Assume you also double with shapely hands (perhaps you don't have a choice with strong hands, with direct bids NF and jumps as fitbids). After 1-(X)-XX-(2); P-(P)-? is 3 forcing (and therefore practically game forcing)?
4. Yes.

View PostDavidKok, on 2020-September-20, 12:29, said:

5. Do you play Good/Bad 2NT, or some flavour of Lebensohl, here? 2 is explained as preemptive.
5. No -- but that's a sensible agreement.

View PostDavidKok, on 2020-September-20, 12:29, said:

6. What is your personal preference for the meaning of redouble after 1-(X)-?
6. Transfer 4+ . Transfers simplify your agreements.

View PostDavidKok, on 2020-September-20, 12:29, said:

7. Does any of this change if partner opened 1 or 1m instead?
7. Not much.

View PostDavidKok, on 2020-September-20, 12:29, said:

8. Do any of your agreements depend on the vulnerability?
8. No.
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#4 User is online   smerriman 

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Posted 2020-September-20, 14:24

There seems to be two standard approaches; one that redouble denies a fit altogether (with, say, 2N Jordan including a 3 card raise), and one that bundles 3 card raises in with the redouble (where you raise at your next opportunity).

1. 1 forcing; suits at the two level nonforcing and denying values. If you don't like not being able to show your suit, that's why people play transfer responses.
2. Depends on the above methods but probably preference given you have 3 to invite.
3. Non-forcing. Bidding before giving your partner a chance to penalise shows a super weak hand. I'd expect something like a 5-5 10-11 count. Jumping to 3C would still be weak, just even more distribution.
4. Can really play anything here.
5. Definitely forcing.
6. Have played both of the above methods; don't really mind.
7, 8. Nope.
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#5 User is offline   Stephen Tu 

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Posted 2020-September-20, 14:58

View PostDavidKok, on 2020-September-20, 12:29, said:

I recently made a mistake about the meaning of a redouble (by me) on the auction 1-(X)-?. I was under the impression that generally an XX here shows around 11+ points and shows values in all unbid suits, denying heart length or an own long suit. This sets up penalty doubles for both partner and me, even on the 1-level. After the auction I learned that not only can a redouble be played as any 11+-point hand (intending to jump in on the next round with a fit?), but also this is actually the explanation in my system notes. Oops..

I will answer questions with an American bias; I don't know standard practices in the Netherlands or really any other country. My learning has been mostly from American and British authors.

The modern advanced/expert trend is to *not* use natural bidding after 1M-x, transfer schemes have a lot of popularity. There is a lot of variation in these, some start transfers at 1nt (xx old fashioned, 1s natural F1), some at 1S, some with redouble. Some give up a way to show a natural 1nt response, some don't; some give up on the old fashioned head-hunting redouble (have to pass then double), some don't, etc. Needs discussion on the exact variant to be played.
Whether you play xfers or not, usually *FOUR+* cd major raises are excluded (weak 3M, LR+ 2nt aka "Jordan" aka "Truscott"). But strong 10/11+ *three* cd M raises, there is still variation. Many people still include some of these in redouble (partner will support later instead of doubling opps/bidding NT/bidding new suit), some people prefer to exclude them (putting them into some transfer raise in some fashion). If playing strictly natural and not transfers I kind of think you have to put some of these good 3cd raises into the xx.
So xx shows 10+ (or maybe 11+ if you are playing lighter openers), and values/length in 2 unbid suits (not necessarily all 3, you are hoping partner can double the other one), OR 10/11+ hands with 3 cd support (if agreed).

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After 1-(X)-?, are 1/2/2 forcing (if you play these as natural)?
Maybe 60 years ago, all natural bids were NF, you had to redouble first to force. Then good players figured out this was terrible opposite preemption, and made 1 level bids forcing but 2 level bids still NF. Then good players decided 2 level NF is still bad and switched to xfers to start showing the suit immediately. In some countries people play 2 level bids as F1, but it's non-std in America.

Quote

After for example 1-(X)-XX-(2); P-(P)-? is 2 (strongly) invitational with around 11 points and three-card heart support, or does it show mild preference to hearts over defending diamonds if partner cannot double?

For me, partner should assume 3 cd LR hand, but occasionally you might turn up a trump short, oh well, he can try to cater to that if he wants to bid game and there might be somewhere else to play. I prefer having 3H available as a force, and being able to invite and stop at 2. But this requires discussion as obviously the posters above me interpret differently.

Quote

If partner bids a new suit, for example 1-(X)-XX-(1); 2-(P)-? is this new bid forcing? Presumably passing 1 was forcing, so bidding with weak hands seems questionable (as it solves the opponent's problems).

Traditionally this is a weak distributional hand, that would never want to defend 1S-dbl, and is NF. Strong hand needs to jump, or pass and bid later.

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After 1-(X)-?, what would a jump shift (2/3/3) show? Forcing fitjumps?
Could be fit jump, weak jump shift, or mixed raise by agreement.

Quote

Assume you also double with shapely hands (perhaps you don't have a choice with strong hands, with direct bids NF and jumps as fitbids). After 1-(X)-XX-(2); P-(P)-? is 3 forcing (and therefore practically game forcing)? Do you play Good/Bad 2NT, or some flavour of Lebensohl, here? 2 is explained as preemptive.
If you are forced to xx with forcing clubs, then 3c is logically forcing. I don't play GB2nt here.

Quote

What is your personal preference for the meaning of redouble after 1-(X)-?
Does any of this change if partner opened 1 or 1m instead?
Do any of your agreements depend on the vulnerability?

I use the traditional meaning of xx, any vul, denies 4+ fit for major or 5+ fit for minor, but can include 3cd M raise hands, and use xfers over 1M-x starting with 1nt, in most of my partnerships.
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#6 User is offline   Vampyr 

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Posted 2020-September-20, 20:43

I use transfers and prefer to give up a natural 1NT bid than the traditional redouble. Obviously each method will occasionally encounter hands that don’t work well. But it’s better than not using transfers at all.
I know not with what weapons World War III will be fought, but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones -- Albert Einstein
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#7 User is online   pilowsky 

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Posted 2020-September-21, 01:05

I used to play a system where after opener bid 1 or 1 and opps doubled, then redouble was a forced relay.
As in 2 pass 2 forced relay.
Saying nothing about my hand at all.
If the Opps were willing to pass out 1 or 1 redoubled, we were happy to take our chances. In the Club, this did happen occasionally.
The point was that opener must never bid. They don't know what responder actually has. It could be just enough to make 1/XX or it could be more.

It's a better score than being in game and easier to make. If opps are going to double, they better mean business.
Non legit hoc
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#8 User is offline   DavidKok 

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Posted 2020-September-21, 03:07

Thank you all for the answers! I'm still confused on some of the details (for example, if 1-(X)-2 is F1, you don't really need 1-(X)-XX-(2); P-(P)-3 GF do you? Or is this a slam-going rock crusher?), but it seems my greatest mistake was (agreeing to play) XX as any 11+, instead of 'traditional XX but also 3-card support limit raises'.
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#9 User is offline   apollo1201 

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Posted 2020-September-21, 14:54

View PostDavidKok, on 2020-September-21, 03:07, said:

Thank you all for the answers! I'm still confused on some of the details (for example, if 1-(X)-2 is F1, you don't really need 1-(X)-XX-(2); P-(P)-3 GF do you? Or is this a slam-going rock crusher?), but it seems my greatest mistake was (agreeing to play) XX as any 11+, instead of 'traditional XX but also 3-card support limit raises'.


2/1 becomes NF, probably sth about 8-9 HCP and a good 6-cd suit. With less, you probably prefer opps to bid and play. Or balance if thing stop low enough.

The tricky situation arises with invitational hands that are insufficient to XX then bid the minor. If you like your hand (e.g. well positioned K/Qs, other major well stopped...), you can try the GF way. If you’re (quasi) balanced and don’t have as attractive assets, you might survive a 1NT call (or XX then 2NT).
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