Response structure for unbalanced 1♦ opening
#1
Posted 2012-February-05, 10:36
Given a wide-ranging (11-21ish) 1♦ opening showing an unbalanced hand with 5+ diamonds or 4=4=4=1, I am looking for a basically natural response structure. The main question for me is how to handle weak, invitational and GF hands with various holdings in the majors.
Fredin-Fallenius apparently play a GF 1NT relay so everything else becomes quite simple and often non-forcing. I'm not quite sure I want to give up the natural 1NT and I don't really want the memory load of the relay structure, so I'm putting this aside for now. I'm sure 1♦-p-2♣-p-p-p is a big winner when it comes up, though.
Kamil-Fleischer apparently play some (slightly ambiguous) SJS. I usually have an allergic reaction to any mention of SJS but I'm sure the idea has merit here. Nevertheless, I'd like to see what I can do the other way around first.
Here's what I was thinking about just now:
1♥ 4+ hearts, 6+ points
1♠ 4+ spades, 6+ points
1NT 7-11 balanced or 7-9 with 6+ clubs
2♣ GF 5+ clubs or 3334
2♦ 6+ either major, 5-8(9) points
2♥ 5 spades, 4 hearts, 6-9 points
2♠ Invitational or better diamond raise
2NT (semi)balanced invite
3♣ Invitational with 6+ clubs
3♦ Weak diamond raise
This way, responder's 1M followed by 2M is forcing.
Thoughts? Have I missed any hand types?
-- Bertrand Russell
#2
Posted 2012-February-05, 11:22
Wondering if your 2C can be nebulous...like clubs or balanced or even just a GF relay. You're very high after 1D-2S for GI+ diamond support; both hands are very unlimited in terms of both strength and pattern and you're not even in a game force.
#3
Posted 2012-February-05, 11:36
straube, on 2012-February-05, 11:22, said:
I guess it'll have to be a simple raise as I don't know where to put that otherwise. Agree it would be nice to have a truly preemptive weak raise available.
Quote
Well I think responder with a 4-card major and GI+ diamond support should generally start by bidding the major, which really narrows down what we need to figure out if we are only going to game.
I agree that 2♣ is probably a bit underloaded.
-- Bertrand Russell
#4
Posted 2012-February-05, 11:45
#5
Posted 2012-February-05, 11:58
-- Bertrand Russell
#6
Posted 2012-February-05, 12:06
mgoetze, on 2012-February-05, 11:58, said:
You'll have too many 1D-2C, 2D auctions. I think you need to branch out after a 2C response and a GF vs simple raise cause opener to react very differently. If both 2C and 2D invite opener to describe his hand, you'll have better communication.
I'd drive to the 3-level when you have a diamond raise. The opponents will often be able to balance into 2M, so you might as well use up that space to describe your own hands.
#7
Posted 2012-February-05, 12:15
Assuming you are playing 1NT rebid in this way, there is really very little need to play reverse flannery. When responder has 5♠/4♥, you respond 1♠. You will always find your heart fit (if any) because opener will rebid 1NT when he has four hearts. You will also find your 5-3 spade fits because opener can presumably raise spades often (especially considering he always has shape, and he has two ways to raise spades a the two-level).
As for 1♦-1♥-1NT, you could play this as some sort of heart raise (to get the "two ways to raise to the two-level" once again) since opener's other hands all have easy rebids (four spades or four clubs or six-plus diamonds or four hearts). But it might be better to swap the 1NT and 2♦ rebids (so 1NT is six-plus diamonds forcing one round and 2♦ is the second heart raise). This gets you a cheap forcing bid over the one-suiter (2♣) and might also help with some types of strong hand (like the GF diamond one-suiter that is annoyingly hard to bid in standard methods).
For the other follow-ups to 1♦ (besides noting you do not really need reverse flannery) I think it's very good to play a natural 2♦ raise here. Opener has a real suit and shape so you can raise pretty freely. Any hand with four-plus diamonds is almost surely better raising to 2♦ rather than bidding 1NT: this will help a lot in a competitive auction, lead to more making partials, helps a lot if opener has a big hand and wants to look for slam, helps with "anti-positional" hands where you are flat but don't want to declare notrump etc. What's left in the 1NT response? Well there's 3334 and there are hands with 5-plus clubs. But even hands with 3♦ might be better off raising diamonds; opener will almost always have a five-card diamond suit after all, in which case 2♦ is often a better spot. The Fredin-Fallenius approach is looking pretty good here...
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#8
Posted 2012-February-05, 12:30
1NT clubs
2♣ 6+ diamonds
2♦ 3-card support for M, non-forcing
2oM reverse
2M 4-card support, non-forcing
2NT strong single-suiter (or maybe a good 4cd raise of M, not sure yet)
3♣ nat forcing
This gives all sorts of ways to raisewith both 3 and 4 cards.
Fredin-Fallenius play essentially the same but with 1♦-1♠-2♦ = 4 hearts, not 3 spades.
-- Bertrand Russell
#9
Posted 2012-February-05, 12:53
mgoetze, on 2012-February-05, 12:30, said:
1NT clubs
2♣ 6+ diamonds
2♦ 3-card support for M, non-forcing
2oM reverse
2M 4-card support, non-forcing
2NT strong single-suiter (or maybe a good 4cd raise of M, not sure yet)
3♣ nat forcing
This gives all sorts of ways to raisewith both 3 and 4 cards.
Fredin-Fallenius play essentially the same but with 1♦-1♠-2♦ = 4 hearts, not 3 spades.
I think you've thought about this a bit more than I have. I'm actually a fan of the nebulous and limited diamond.
Still, I don't quite understand this rebid structure. For instance 1D-1M, 2C to show diamonds leaves 2D as mostly a dead end. True, opener can take another bid, but how often will he?
Also 1D-1M, 1N as clubs leaves 2C as a sign off and 2D as a sign off and 2M as a sign off. You need to have forcing bids here.
You could do (as you suggested) 1D-1M, 1N as single-suited diamonds.
I've also seen 1D-1M, 1N as 3-cd support for partner's major (possible with 6D3M or various 5D43M1s) . You've shown then 3M and 5D which seems reasonable at this point. Perhaps 1N should be forcing? 1D-1M, 1N would appear to leave a 2C rebid by responder to start some sort of invitational or GF auction....because clubs haven't really been promised here. In the event that you use this, it seems like you still need Reverse Flannery.
#10
Posted 2012-February-05, 12:53
#11
Posted 2012-February-05, 13:22
Otherwise, awm basically said it all. It must be right to use 1N/2C/2D as C/D/H and 2H/2S as raises, you really shouldn't need RRF here. I agree with his suggestion that 1D:1H, 1N should show D and 1D:1S, 1N show D+H - having the 2♣ first step as a force is much more useful than having it say "I would have passed a 2♣ rebid".
The only thing I can really add is to suggest -
1♦:1♠, 2♥ = 11-13 or 17+, three-card support. Now 3♦ is to play opposite the weak type.
1♦:1♠, 2♠ = 11-14 four-card support or 14-16 three-card support.
#12
Posted 2012-February-05, 14:27
Now I think I've finally figured out how to make use of them (with a little help from Michael Kamil's system notes), they're suddenly not.
The idea here is that you get to figure out the shape at the 2-level when opener makes a delayed 3-card raise with an intermediate hand (say 15-17).
1♦-1♠-1NT-2m-2♠ = intermediate with implicitly short hearts
1♦-1♥-2♣-2♦-2[h] = intermediate, usually 2362
and so on. Whereas the immediate 2♦ rebid shows a real minimum. I don't see what range e.g. gnasher is proposing for 1NT = 3-card raise, if it's wide-ranging I don't see the advantage.
(Did that answer your questions straube?)
-- Bertrand Russell
#13
Posted 2012-February-05, 14:44
I think awm is right about 1D-1S, 1N showing hearts. I'm less certain about 1D-1H, 1N showing diamonds. I'd like to be able to show a 3-cd raise there.
Seems like you are getting good help now with people who have experience with the unbalanced diamond. Good luck finding the right continuations.
#14
Posted 2012-February-05, 14:58
MickyB, on 2012-February-05, 13:22, said:
Well I'm pretty happy with my 1♣ system on paper... of course you never know what might happen if someone actually volunteered to play it with me on a regular basis.
Quote
Pardon, what's RRF?
-- Bertrand Russell
#16
Posted 2012-February-05, 16:35
mgoetze, on 2012-February-05, 14:27, said:
We play it as wide-range, less than a game-force, but still forcing (because it will hardly ever be right to play in 1NT, and responder could never know whether it was).
After 1♦-1♠;1NT, responder's 2♣ is invitational+ and asking; opener shows his shape at the two-level with a minimum, or bids higher with enough to drive game. With less than an invitation, responder signs off somewhere; opener can move over that with a maximum.
Comparing the two:
- When responder is invitational, my responder can find out opener's shape and still stop at the two level opposite the wrong minimum. Your responder knows only that he's facing 3-card support. On the other hand, you conceal opener's shape on the hands where responder doesn't want to know - your responder can jump to 4M opposite a minimum, but mine is having to relay in case opener has enough to make slam good (though I could probably fix that).
- I have better sequences when responder has a game-force, because in FSF sequences opener is known not to have 3-card support.
- When responder is minimum and opener has extras, I get to the three-level but you can stop at the two-level.
- When responder is invitational and opener has extras, my responder bids 2♣ and hears about the extras and the shape. Your responder bids 2NT, jump preference, or raises opener's second suit, and then hears 3M. You're a bit higher, but you have also exchanged a bit more information.
I suspect that there's not enough in it to make either of us change our methods.
(I didn't discuss 1♦-1♥;1NT because there is less room after responder's 2♣ enquiry, so it would place my methods in a worse light.)
#17
Posted 2012-February-05, 16:38
MickyB, on 2012-February-05, 13:22, said:
Why?
#18
Posted 2012-February-05, 17:16
Responses are
1♥ = 4+ hearts, 6+ points but not a 2/3♥ bid
1♠ = ditto spades
1NT = up to 10, no 4 card Major, no 4D, therefore 3334, or 5 clubs. This makes it very easy for opener to bid clubs if it is not his shortage.
2♣ = 11+ with no 4 card Major (either clubs or diamonds may be the longest suit)
2♦ = 4+ <11
2M = 11/12, 6 card suit precisely
3-bids weak preempts with 7 cards (5 if diamonds)
Opener's rebids are simple. He will have one of 3 hand types ; 6+ diamonds, 10+ cards in the minors (2-suited), or 3-suited.
With the first we rebid 2♦, the second rebid 2♣, the third support partner's major. A 3451 shape supports immediately even if it is the 3 card suit, because the shortage and consequent ruffs compensates. And it keeps it simple.
If responder's major hits the shortage, we rebid 1NT. (This makes more sense to me than specifically showing 4 hearts.) This 1NT guarantees 4 cards (or 3 with ruffs) in any other suit, so there is no problem in responder bidding another suit to play.
A raise of that 1NT to 2NT is game invitational 11/12, and a rebid of the major is NOT to play (do you want to play opposite a void? - this is why I am not keen on your proposed 2♦ response : better to play in 1NT in my view.) but a NT game invitation for opener if he is 15/16. This means 1♦ 1♥ 1NT 2♣ is not checkback etc, but to play.
A response of 2M as 11/12 with 6 allows a weakish opener with a singleton to pass, and other major holdings go though 1M.
Your suggested (semi)balanced 2NT response sort of commits you when there could be a gaping hole in your unknown short suit, I feel, so my 2♣ equivalent allows both a 2♦ get-out and showing majors that have stops, to allow a sensible NT decision.
While I could never cope with your non-natural rebids after 1♦ 1M, it seems to me you have no bid for the 3 suiter with a shortage in that major. 1NT would be nice ! .. which means you could bid clubs with clubs? And diamonds with diamonds? But then it would be "natural systems" of course
#19
Posted 2012-February-05, 17:35
gnasher, on 2012-February-05, 16:38, said:
I doubt my reasons are anything new to you, but here goes -
"Unbalanced with a diamond suit" is a better initial description than "clubs or balanced [or strong]". It is more likely partner will be able to support us, either preemptively [1D-(P)-3D-??] or when oppo preempt us [1D-(2S)-3D]. Our hand may not have the expected 5th trump, but it rates to meet partner's expectations, especially as he rates to have some club length given that he hasn't decided to show a major instead.
Even playing natural methods, many canapé (13)45s. Playing a more nebulous 1♣ opening is unlikely to ease the perceived issues with opening 1♣ - responder may struggle to show a diamond suit as well.
When I last played an unbalanced diamond, I used 1D:1H, 1NT and 1D:1H, 2C to both show the minors, separating the 5-4s from the 4-5s. Even rebidding 1NT to show the minors, either way, is an improvement on rebidding 2♣ to show this hand, as it removes the desire to give false preference. It has been a while since I evaluated this scheme so I won't attempt to defend it against the 1NT rebids that have been suggested in this thread.
#20
Posted 2012-February-06, 03:23
1♥ = any invitational or better hand
1♠ = weak, natural, non-forcing
1NT = weak, 4+ hearts, non-forcing
2♣ = weak, natural, non-forcing
2♦ = weak raise, 3+ diamonds
2M = weak, natural, non-forcing (reverse Flannery might be better here opposite an unlimited Opener)
2NT = mixed raise
3♣ = weak, natural, non-forcing
3♦ = preemptive raise
Relays are available over 1♥ but even if you do not like relays there is enough space to bid sensibly. For example, Opener's rebids might be natural with 1NT showing 4 hearts and a minimum.