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F Word No, not THAT one....

#1 User is offline   Al_U_Card 

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Posted 2005-August-30, 09:58

The hand I hate the most :angry: , playing 2/1, is the 5C 4D with 11-16 hcp. Whichever minor I choose to open, for whatever reason, tends to work out poorly.

Back to the F Word. I do play Fl...... :) and thought about using 2H to show that hand and keeping 2D for the minor suit Fl...... hand mentioned above.

Pre-empts being what they are these days :( the frequency of the 5C4D hand is, I believe, slightly more common than hands with 6 D etc......

Does anyone have ways of dealing with the 5C 4D hand in sayc or 2/1 methods?
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#2 User is offline   awm 

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Posted 2005-August-30, 10:16

Well, Elianna and I almost always open 1 on this hand. It works out very well for us, in part because our style includes:

(1) Normally bid up the line in response to 1m; no walsh style.
(2) Frequently rebid 1NT on stiff with "awkward" hands (i.e. 3145 after 1-1).
(3) Frequently raise partner's major on three (i.e. 3145 after 1-1).

Because of (2) and (3), we don't typically rebid 2M on five card suits unless very good texture, which avoids the 5-1 fit on these hands. Yes we sometimes miss a 5-2 major fit when the five card suit is mediocre, but this only sometimes plays better than 1NT (we probably win as many as we lose).
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#3 User is offline   kfgauss 

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Posted 2005-August-30, 11:42

awm, on Aug 30 2005, 04:16 PM, said:

(2) Frequently rebid 1NT on stiff with "awkward" hands (i.e. 3145 after 1-1).

I haven't played this style seriously. I just recently played with a partner who likes rebidding 1N on 1444's too (as opposed to playing that lovely 4-2 diamond fit).

Does anyone have recommended response schemes here -- e.g. ways one should modify 2-way checkback to account for these possibilities (I haven't thought about it much, so any observations would be useful)?

----------

As for the original post, I tend to open 1C on these hands and rebid 2C when partner bids my stiff with most partners (the ones with whom I don't rebid 1N with 1444). I also basically always raise if pard bids my 3 card suit (there's a discussion of this going on in this same forum right now). If I have 10xxxx or something, I might open 1D, but the club suit would have to be pretty bad.

Andy
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#4 User is offline   pclayton 

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Posted 2005-August-30, 12:12

This one's been touched on a few times here.

Open these 1. The rebids in general (with minimums):

1=3=4=5 - Raise 1 to 2, rebid 1N over 1.
3=1=4=5 - Raise 1 to 2, rebid 1 (good spades or extras) or 1N over 1.
2=2=4=5 - Usually rebid 1N

With dynamite diamonds and ratty clubs, its OK to open 1. With really good clubs, you can rebid them instead of the off-shape 1N rebid.

With the 15-17 range, you can make a reverse with a pure hand or open 1N. Frankly, I think its this range that is the hardest to deal with.
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#5 User is offline   EricK 

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Posted 2005-August-30, 12:20

If you are prepared to give up a strong 2 you can play Mega-Flannery

2 = 45
2 = 45
2 = 45

If you do, let me know how it works out!

Eric
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#6 Guest_Jlall_*

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Posted 2005-August-30, 12:28

yikes, dropped the F bomb 3 times.
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#7 User is offline   Al_U_Card 

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Posted 2005-August-30, 12:44

Jlall, on Aug 30 2005, 01:28 PM, said:

yikes, dropped the F bomb 3 times.

Are you sure you're old enuf to attend this forum?...lol
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#8 User is offline   Al_U_Card 

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Posted 2005-August-30, 12:48

pclayton, on Aug 30 2005, 01:12 PM, said:

This one's been touched on a few times here.

With the 15-17 range, you can make a reverse with a pure hand or open 1N. Frankly, I think its this range that is the hardest to deal with.

Indeed it has. I guess the thread may have almost as much to do with the fact that shapely hands get well described by rebids while balanced hands leave a lot to the imagination (or fabrication as in some of the examples).....
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#9 Guest_Jlall_*

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Posted 2005-August-30, 13:03

Al_U_Card, on Aug 30 2005, 01:44 PM, said:

Jlall, on Aug 30 2005, 01:28 PM, said:

yikes, dropped the F bomb 3 times.

Are you sure you're old enuf to attend this forum?...lol

lol, not if I see a triple flannery system. nobody is old enough for that.
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#10 User is offline   Fluffy 

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Posted 2005-August-30, 16:01

Since 1-1-2 can be a 4-4 minor hand when 1444 it is sensible to open 1 and rebid 2 with 45, I haven't seen much troubles using this, never yet played in the 4-2.

Of course if the suit is good enough, you can open 1 and rebid it without much trouble. Use your criterium.
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#11 User is offline   Free 

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Posted 2005-August-30, 16:13

Fluffy, on Aug 30 2005, 11:01 PM, said:

Since 1-1-2 can be a 4-4 minor hand when 1444 it is sensible to open 1 and rebid 2 with 45, I haven't seen much troubles using this, never yet played in the 4-2.

Of course if the suit is good enough, you can open 1 and rebid it without much trouble. Use your criterium.

completely agree
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#12 User is offline   flytoox 

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Posted 2005-August-30, 22:29

Al_U_Card, on Aug 30 2005, 03:58 PM, said:

The hand I hate the most :P , playing 2/1, is the 5C 4D with 11-16 hcp. Whichever minor I choose to open, for whatever reason, tends to work out poorly.

Back to the F Word. I do play Fl...... ;) and thought about using 2H to show that hand and keeping 2D for the minor suit Fl...... hand mentioned above.

Pre-empts being what they are these days :( the frequency of the 5C4D hand is, I believe, slightly more common than hands with 6 D etc......

Does anyone have ways of dealing with the 5C 4D hand in sayc or 2/1 methods?

2D showing 4d5c is not playable. You will often end up with 3C, unnecessary one level hgher than it should be.
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#13 User is offline   Chamaco 

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Posted 2005-August-31, 02:44

If you play a Standard-ish 5 card major system with short club opening (e.g. 1C = either clubs unbalanced or weak NT or 18-19/20), then you can handle the 45 via the 1/1NT rebid sequences.
In fact, 1 followed by 1NT cannot be semibalanced (weak NT with 5332 in is opened 1), so it is artificial for sme specific hand types.
IMO it is better to use it as a catchall for all hands that do not want to rebid naturally 2 o 2: :

Sequence 1

1:1:1NT
In this case, it usually shows canapé in the minors.

Sequence 2

1:1:1NT

In this case, the 1NT can still be used as a catchall: this time it would include not only canapé in the minors, *but also a hand with 4 hearts that cannot reverse*.

In both sequences the use of XYZ allows to checkback for the shape (e.g. find out hearts in sequence 2).

Incidentally, this scheme works also for Precision 1 openers, in the versions where it promises 4+diamonds unbalanced (e.g. the weak NT hand is opened 1NT).
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#14 User is offline   Gerben42 

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Posted 2005-August-31, 04:20

Very sensible stuff Chamaco, but playing standard open 1 unless you are prepared to rebid your .

is NOT a 1 opening bid unless you are a fan of 5-1 fits (or actually your partner should be a fan of the 5-1 fits since he'll play it)
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#15 User is offline   helene_t 

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Posted 2005-August-31, 04:49

flytoox, on Aug 31 2005, 06:29 AM, said:

2D showing 4d5c is not playable. You will often end up with 3C, unnecessary one level hgher than it should be.

Then maybe you could change it to 5d4c. Then 1 followed by 2 is canapé.
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#16 User is offline   MickyB 

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Posted 2005-August-31, 06:16

Gerben, if you open 1 on that you will land up in a fair few 4-2 diamond fits. No idea which is more likely to land you in a misfit, instinctively I prefer opening 1 and rebidding 2 unless pard will rarely rebid a 5 card spade suit over a 1NT rebid by me.

Chamaco - I thought about something like that a while back. I think it is better for 1:1, 2 to explicitly promise longer diamonds and 1:1, 1N to show equal or longer clubs, now with xx55 opposite xx23 you can play in 2 instead of a false preference to 2.

I'm also not sure about 1:1, 1N, not only does it make it difficult to reach the best part-score but constructive bidding afterwards could be difficult. Not quite sure what the best solution is...maybe 1N shows hearts, fairly unlimited, 2 shows both minors either way around, below reverse strength, and 2 shows both minors, reversing strength?
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#17 User is offline   Chamaco 

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Posted 2005-August-31, 06:54

MickyB, on Aug 31 2005, 12:16 PM, said:

I'm also not sure about 1:1, 1N, not only does it make it difficult to reach the best part-score but constructive bidding afterwards could be difficult. Not quite sure what the best solution is...maybe 1N shows hearts, fairly unlimited, 2 shows both minors either way around, below reverse strength, and 2 shows both minors, reversing strength?

It depends what the rest of your structure is.
For me, after 1:1, 1N, I play xyz this way

....- 2 = Puppet to 2, either signoff in or any invitational hand if followed by a rebid
....- 2 = generic GF
....- 2 =5, 4+, weak
....- 2 = natural, weak
....- 2[NT] = slammish 2 suiter, spades + clubs
....- 3 = signoff in clubs
....- 3 = slammish 2 suiter, spades + diamonds
....- 3 =slammish 2 suiter, spades + hearts
....- 3 = slammish 1 suiter

This way you cannot sign off in clubs at the 2 level, but most of the other distributions weak and strong are protected.
Of course, there is always a tradeoff.

There are other, more refined version of xyz (e.g. xfer checkback, etc etc), that should be able to handle the same sequences after the catchall 1D/1NT rebid.
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Posted 2005-August-31, 08:16

flytoox, on Aug 30 2005, 11:29 PM, said:

2D showing 4d5c is not playable. You will often end up with 3C, unnecessary one level hgher than it should be.

Lets just say that, as always, trade-offs exist. Chamaco's xyz method, which while intricate and accurate STILL does not allow a signoff in 2C...btw even tho I play MP at f2f and IMPS online, being allowed to play in 2C is so rare that the preemptive nature of a 2D bid for this type of hand (especially when pard declares the 3C contract) that it will spare you some of the BOP doubles of 3C that you might get on a contested part-score auction.
I did play this 2D method for some time at matchpoints with success.
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