What system do you recommend a novice should learn?
#3
Posted 2013-June-28, 00:04
- your location in the world
- who you are going to be playing regularly with, and is this going to be at live bridge clubs, or online, or both. It's best to attempt to find some regular partners to learn along with. Live, bridge class teachers and/or directors (particularly of '99er or '299 er games, if ACBL) can fix you up with people of your level. Online, there is the beginner-intermediate lounge on BBO (bilbridge.com) you might consider joining. I think BIL now also runs a free club under "public clubs", so you can get games but without fee I don't think you get access to their teaching materials and lessons.
If you are American, you need to be learning SA, and probably have to learn 2/1 in the long run. Just starting 2/1 to begin with is OK if you have partners to play 2/1 with, unfortunately this can be hard as the "everyone should just start learning 2/1" approach is still in its infancy. OTOH if you are say British, you probably want to be learning Acol instead. For other countries, the standard system varies.
Online, American based systems tend to dominate, so BBO at the int- level you probably do have to learn SAYC, though you should target progressing to 2/1.
My advice in the other threads wasn't "don't learn SAYC"; I meant "don't attempt to learn SAYC with the SAYC booklet as your sole teaching material". Learn SA from other sources, bridge books targeted at beginners, from authors like Kantar & Root among others. When you start to learn conventions, go ahead and first learn those conventions which are part of SAYC, so that you can play with pickup partners online. So things like major suit transfers, negative doubles, Michaels cue bids, Jacoby 2nt, how to bid after weak twos and strong artificial 2c, fairly universal stuff. Otherwise stick with the most common conventions, like the "one-star" conventions in the Modern Bridge Conventions book.
But don't use the impossibly brief SAYC pamphlet as your teacher, trying to fill in the blanks yourself as you appear to be doing now! That's nearly impossible, hence all the threads you have started recently. Go find some good actual beginning bidding books, after you read them you will be in much better shape to figure out how things are supposed to work.
#4
Posted 2013-June-28, 00:04
#5
Posted 2013-June-28, 01:46
If you are in Poland, learn Polish club. In England, learn Acol. In France, learn SEF. Etc.
#6
Posted 2013-June-28, 01:54
At the end of the day, it probably matters more that you understand the logic behind why a bidding system is built a certain way than which system it actually is, providing the system is essentially natural. As an example, the first two bidding systems I learned were Culbertson (no Milton Work count!) and 5 card major Acol with a 16-18 NT. Both of these are incredibly bad systems by modern standards but were nonetheless good building blocks since they were simple enough to follow their logic and extend the ideas for grasping better methods later on.
#7
Posted 2013-June-28, 02:04
But by far the most important factor is which system potential partners play. It would be crazy to teach British Acol outside of the UK/Ireland/Oz/NZ area. In NA maybe one could consider "SA with Acol logic", i.e. openings as in SAYC but the forcing character of most bids as in Acol, and certainly one could do that in Scandinavia and Benelux where such an approach is common among club players already. It probably depends how ambitious the students are. If you are sure they are going to play 2/1 within 12 months anyway you might as well start with that.
Personally I found (admittedly based on a small sample size) that beginners learned strong club systems faster than standard systems so maybe I should have voted Precision. But I am not sure if it is such a good idea as the learning curves becomes steeper later when they have to learn to cope with interference over the 1♣ opening. And again, it really isn't a good idea to teach Precision in a country where everyone plays some SA/Acol like system. I only taught it when the students self or their previous teacher insisted on it.
#8
Posted 2013-June-28, 03:48
plum_tree, on 2013-June-27, 23:15, said:
SAYC is fine. The question is the source you are looking at. The booklet is not a teaching utiliy.
In short, if you started with SAYC, you can continue, just look for another source, a source intended to teach SAYC.
As far as I understood: Audrey Grants book are quite well written.
http://www.amazon.co...72412612&sr=1-3
I learned using books written by Ron Klinger.
On a sidenote: I would not start with 2/1, unless you have a fixed partner, and which learns at same time as you.
If you happen to play SAYC style, you will have an easier time finding partners, although as a beginning player you
should not switch partners too often.
With kind regards
Marlowe
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#9
Posted 2013-June-28, 04:25
Can you provide me with the link to any official system sanctioned by your union?
#11
Posted 2013-June-28, 06:36
Acknowledgments:
Standard English Acol was developed by Sandra Landy with the help of the Bridge for All drafting team Mike Pomfrey, Jean Patefield and Simon Ainger. Bridge for All is the nationally approved method of learning the game formally recognised by the Open College Network.
If any forum posters serve on a home union, I strongly suggest that you follow the example set by the English Bridge Union! Well done to them!
Just one quick question on this from me:
Is the "Foundation Level" version meant for beginners? I still need to start studying this.
#14
Posted 2013-June-28, 07:46
plum_tree, on 2013-June-28, 07:36, said:
Thanks again.
Do the Australians, New Zealanders and the Canadians have an official system sanctioned by the home union? Does anyone have a link to it?
Australians don't. The most common system bases are either Acol or Standard American in roughly equal measure. 2/1 and various strong club systems are each maybe played by about 10% of tournaments players.
My understanding is that Acol is the most common system in New Zealand, but I doubt they would have an "official" system.
Canadians play in the ACBL.
#15
Posted 2013-June-28, 07:47
however, acol is the most natural system (no opening 3 card suits, etc) and as such, it's perfect for beginners.
#16
Posted 2013-June-28, 09:44
CSGibson, on 2013-June-28, 01:46, said:
If you learn a system based on the idea that a 2/1 response is FG, you learn how to bid in competition. The fact that the competitive bidding you learn in 2/1 would be same if you were playing SA is not really relevant.
That said, it's still true that it's easier to find pickup partners who play SA than those who play 2/1, at beginner level. Nonetheless, SA as a system is dying out, at least in duplicate. I doubt that's true of rubber bridge, though.
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#17
Posted 2013-June-28, 10:23
#18
Posted 2013-June-28, 10:43
blackshoe, on 2013-June-28, 09:44, said:
That said, it's still true that it's easier to find pickup partners who play SA than those who play 2/1, at beginner level. Nonetheless, SA as a system is dying out, at least in duplicate. I doubt that's true of rubber bridge, though.
I have no idea what you are trying to say. Here is what I am saying: In the auction 1S (2D) 2H, 2H is not forcing to game for 2/1 players playing a standard 2/1. Opener needs to know whether 2S/3H is passable, and whether 3C creates a game force opposite the invitation. Those are concepts rooted in standard american bidding - I abandoned standard american before learning those things, and it is the area of bidding I struggle the most in as a result.
It is extremely simple to convert to 2/1 after starting standard american, I see no problem learning the more basic first and then applying concepts later.
#19
Posted 2013-June-28, 11:20
CSGibson, on 2013-June-28, 10:43, said:
I think he's saying that learning SA is not a prerequisite to learning 2/1, as your initial post suggests. Bidding in competition is complicated, learning uncontested SA sequences doesn't really help so much in this sort of case because it's still not identical. In modern SA, 1s-2h-2s is 1rf, 1s-2h-2nt is probably best played as 1rf and extras. But in competition, most good players are playing that 2H *does not* guarantee a rebid, so usually rebidding 1st suit or 2nt is NF by opener. To force opener has to bid new suit or cue or jump. So learning SA first doesn't really give you a huge leg up in learning how to bid in competition, because it's *not* really simply "revert to SA uncontested in comp". Addition of neg double and cue bid options change many sequences, and 2/1 free bid auctions are not identical either.
The assertion is that learning "2/1 uncontested + contested auctions" isn't any more difficult than learning "SA uncontested + contested auctions", and might be easier. And that learning SA uncontested auctions doesn't really cover contested auctions.
I agree with Larry Cohen that in U.S. we should just start teaching 2/1 to everyone. It's relatively easy to teach someone that they can 2/1 if they have enough for game, and with less than that bid 1nt if you don't have something suitable for direct major raise. And that after 2/1 you can't stop below 3nt. It's more complicated to teach 2/1 leaves them in a twilight zone where some continuations are GF while others aren't. The only thing tricky is teaching the 1ntf response, opener's requirement to bid minor fragments to respect the force, and responder's corresponding duty to take more false preferences since the minor rebids are suspect. The argument is that this is probably easier to deal with than all the variety of varied rules of which rebids are forcing or not after a non-GF 2/1.
#20
Posted 2013-June-28, 12:28
It is also simple and easier to learn.
For many ACBL members it seems to be difficult for them to remember how clueless we are at first. I know when I first walked into the San Roque Bridge Club in Santa Barbara and played with the director that I had never heard of a "negative double" and had no idea that some people did not open a major suit unless they held 5 card length.