Extending NT ranges
#1
Posted 2012-April-13, 04:41
Ive now switched to an 11-14 NT opening with most partners, which also has the benefit of avoiding those horrible P P 1N (with 12 or a bad 13) auctions, where you dread partners inevitable invite obviously in principle you end up in the same spot, but it means third in you can think about opening 1N on much weaker hands if circumstances look right, and has the usual preemptive value over an opponent in 2nd who might have wanted to compete.
Ive also been thinking about extending the logic to 1N rebids, which would let us have a 10-13 mini opening and a 14-17 1N rebid, though this seems like it would cause problems for 2/1 bids. (perhaps having a 2/1 GFing system would help here?)
Presumably these possibilities arent new What are peoples experiences with them? Does it make a difference whether youre playing a strongish or weakish NT?
#2
Posted 2012-April-13, 05:13
And obviously it has some disadvantages, too - sometimes missing a game when opener refuses to accept an invite with a good 13 or bad 14 (because it is quite far from our maximum), sometimes getting too high when opener has a modest 12. Playing more 2NT contracts than the field.
I am not sure how the pros and cons balance, but theoretically there must be situations when the case for a narrow range is relatively strong:
- when opening in 2nd/4th seat (and 3rd if playing a strong or variable nt).
- when being vulnerable, especially at IMPs (how the opps' vulnerability factors in depends on your range; playing an ultra-weak NT it is important to keep them out of game, ie it is more attractive to open 1NT when opps are red; playing an intermediate nt range it is more attractive to preempt when they are green)
- You can probably manage a slightly wider range when rebidding 1nt than when opening 1NT but on the other hand a 1NT rebid has no preemptive value.
Personally I am no fan of weak nt in 3rd/4th although I suppose I could be talked into playing a weak nt in 3rd when green at IMPs. Otherwise I think a 3rd/4th seat 1NT opening should say "bid game if you have a maximum pass". I.e. if we play 11-14 in 1st I would play 15-17 in 3rd. Then again I think a variable NT range in an otherwise standard natural system is really complicated. So for a semi-serious partnership with standard methods I prefer strong NT. A strong club system with variable NT is fine for me.
#3
Posted 2012-April-13, 06:36
Then you can do say:
1st & 2nd: 11-13 opens 1NT, and 14-16 accepts the transfer while 17-19 bids 1NT,
3rd + 4th: 14-16 opens, 11-13 accepts the transfer.
It's not as plug and play with a mini. Say 1NT = 9-12, accepting the transfer is 13-15 bal, 16-18 bids 1NT, and 19-20 opens 2NT. The 2NT is awful, but we can use your range extension concept here. 1NT = 9-12, accepting is 13-15 bal, 1NT is 16-19 and 2NT is 20-21, which works nicely!
Edit: Downside is sometimes you are going to end up playing some rather rubbish 2D contracts after 1S responses and partner's 1NT response must be limited to 9 otherwise the sequence 1C-1NT will be awful. 2NT should probably then be 10-11? 12? bal.. I think you need to play a Fantunes alike then.
Maybe it doesn't work.
#4
Posted 2012-April-13, 07:32
Jinksy, on 2012-April-13, 04:41, said:
You have drawn an incorrect conclusion.
Bidding 1N:2N natural invite has only a small upside over a narrow range of hands. When partner rejects, you are playing a risky contract with no upside. Whether partner accepts or rejects, you have given info away [especially if your route for inviting is actually 1N:2C, 2X:2N]. This is why people wouldn't miss their invite if it wasn't available. Playing a four-point range forces you to use your invite more frequently, this is not a good thing.
#5
Posted 2012-April-13, 07:35
helene_t, on 2012-April-13, 05:13, said:
With my most regular p I play this (11-14 1st and second, 15-17 third and fourth, colourblind) and I dont have anything against it, but I still quite like a weak NT 3rd and 4th third because you can now chance doing it slightly light (or very light at green), knowing that P wont invite, and still have a good chance of it getting passed out, fourth because its now very likely to be passed out, meaning you might be able to get a +ive score when they have a spade fit.
#6
Posted 2012-April-13, 07:40
see the following thread, it wont cover everything, but it was helpful for us,
and it may also be helpful for you.
http://www.bridgebas...__1#entry424309
We think it was a good idea to switch.
With kind regards
Marlowe
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#7
Posted 2012-April-13, 07:54
- hrothgar
#8
Posted 2012-April-13, 10:43
#9
Posted 2012-April-13, 10:51
I don't agree with the logic "experts don't invite much, therefore invites are underutilized, therefore our system should allow us to invite more." I think it's more like "experts believe invites are generally a bad idea, therefore they like systems that don't require many invites, therefore they don't invite much."
- billw55
#10
Posted 2012-April-15, 18:29
We feel comfortable with the 11-14 range, and it has not proved too inefficient to use, though that may be luck more than anything else.
Instead of extending our NT range to make more invites practical, we decided to use what are normally invitational bids for other things - slam exploration, dealing with hands that have 4 card majors and 6 card minors in various strengths, differentiating between weak trumps and good trumps in choice of games or slam decisions, etc. In fact, we only have one invitational sequence - stayman, followed by 2♠ is a general min-max ask. We give it up when opener has spades without hearts.
In practice, there have been both gains and losses from not having an invite. The gains and losses from not having an invite are fairly even (staying at 1N, 2M when 2N/3M were going down balancing the instances where an invitational sequence would have made a correct game decision), while the gains from the alternative treatments have been substantial when they have occurred, because other tables just don't have those tools available.
#11
Posted 2012-April-15, 20:00
#12
Posted 2012-April-16, 01:23
JLOGIC, on 2012-April-15, 20:00, said:
Yes. I would say "its my partner's system", but even though that's true, I feel like we do better with our replacement treatments anyway, so I can't really cry foul about it. We tend to try to use our only invitational sequence with a decent 12, force to game with 13+ opposite, and go low road with 11-. What we give up on the times that an invitational sequence would have been useful, we gain back by making the opening lead harder in our tight games, by staying one level lower on most of the "decline" hands, and by allowing for the use of our specialized treatments. Systemically, we've had a positive net average against comparable pairs for auctions that start 1N, though our variance on any particular hand tends to be fairly large.
#13
Posted 2012-April-16, 04:21
What we did:
Wide range variable no trump 11-16 1st,2nd with 17-19 1N rebid 14-19 3rd,4th with 11-13 1N rebid.
Red suit transfers, inv+ 4+ cards (artificial responses range/fit) with 2♣ as the "bucket bid" that covered lots of possibilities.
We split the responses to the transfers into 3 2 point ranges, and the only issue was that the middle range was awkward to handle so I would narrow that to one point and keep the others at 2 or contract to 4 points and only have 2 range responses.
The biggest surprise benefit we got was the 15-20 1N overcall which worked great, as did the 11-16 protective one.
What I do now:
Weak no trump, 1N rebid 15-bad 19, 2N opener good 19-21 meaning 1x-1y-2N is artificial GF unbalanced. The downside of playing 2N a bit more often on 15 opposite 7 is counterbalanced by playing 1N on 18 opposite 5, and playing 2M in a 4-4 or 4-3 rather than 1N.
#14
Posted 2012-April-16, 16:50
Jinksy, on 2012-April-13, 07:35, said:
It's risky to open 1NT light in 3rd seat. 4th seat is the only unlimited hand and is likely to be able to double. Partner has not opened so is limited to about 11 HCP and will quite often be weaker still, such that 1NT has no chance of making. Partner also did not have a weak 2 or other pre-emptive opening, so the chances of finding somewhere good to run to are lowered.
Although the weak NT is semi-preemptive, the seats in which it works best are the opposite of those where normal pre-empts work best. It is most effective in 2nd seat when partner is unlimited but RHO is limited, as for one thing it prevents LHO making a light opener in 3rd seat.
#15
Posted 2012-April-16, 17:24
Statto, on 2012-April-16, 16:50, said:
Although the weak NT is semi-preemptive, the seats in which it works best are the opposite of those where normal pre-empts work best. It is most effective in 2nd seat when partner is unlimited but RHO is limited, as for one thing it prevents LHO making a light opener in 3rd seat.
This comment is right, although 1st seat is good too. One from the weekend, I dealt and opened a fairly revolting NV weak NT off xxx, Axxxx, AJ, Kxx and this ended the auction, dummy was x, KQ10x, K9xxx, xxx they cashed 5 spades and 3 clubs for -100 and a huge board as although 3♥ would make for us, 4♠ was on for them so 170/200/420/450 were pretty common, it's easy to overcall 1♠ over 1♥ with a fairly poor 5323 12 count, but less easy to overcall 2♠ over 1N and the 4144 8 count didn't reopen either.
#16
Posted 2012-April-16, 18:32
Statto, on 2012-April-16, 16:50, said:
Yeah, with some of my partners I play strong in 3rd seat at teams.
#17
Posted 2012-April-16, 23:32
Quote
Note that not all invites have the same values. Invite that allow you to play 2M will bring a lot more Imps and MP than invite that lead to 2Nt/3m or 3M.
For instance, he doesn't like being used as a human shield when we're being shot at.
I happen to think it's a very noble way to meet one's maker, especially for a guy like him.
Bottom line is we never let that difference of opinion interfere with anything."
#18
Posted 2012-April-17, 10:54
I play weak in fourth, but I don't particularly like it; there the opponents know that it's a partscore fight and are much more willing to try for 200/300.
Now that I'm playing Keri, I find I'm inviting more (especially by a passed hand) opposite 12-14; but we have yet to make the "NT invitation". I don't like those, except in the "I'm playing 14-16 in a 15-17 world" scenario, where the invite is "go on 15". It's worse than the world's 1NT-3NT, and worse than the world's 1NT-p, but it's better than 1NT-3NT into the world's 1NT-p.