Is there a general consensus on the use of splinters over an opening of 1m? If so, what's the criteria?
Right now, I'm thinking it should be the following:
* 13-15 HCP
* 4+ card support
* Singleton/void in suit bid
This would be used in combination with the standard 1m - 3NT response (13-15 HCP, no four card major, stoppers in all unbid suits) and inverted minors.
Since Acol uses a weak NT and four card major, that guarantees that opener has either 12+ HCP and 5+ cards in the minor, or 15+ HCP and 4+ cards on the minor.
Thoughts?
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splinter over 1m (acol)
#2
Posted 2013-August-11, 01:56
The general consensus, I think, is to also have the bid deny a 4 card major.
I also think (and this is not general consensus!) that splinters opposite 1m are not a great idea in any case. When the opened suit is a major, it is very likely you want to be in 4M (or more). However, when the suit is a minor, 3NT is always a lively possibility, and a splinter leaves almost no room to decide on the best game.
I also think (and this is not general consensus!) that splinters opposite 1m are not a great idea in any case. When the opened suit is a major, it is very likely you want to be in 4M (or more). However, when the suit is a minor, 3NT is always a lively possibility, and a splinter leaves almost no room to decide on the best game.
#3
Posted 2013-August-11, 02:14
We play the direct splinter as specifically a void (but game values+ unlimited) and go through the inverted minor sequence with a singleton.
#4
Posted 2013-August-11, 05:05
We use immediate splinters as 12-14 and stronger splinters via inverted minor. Splinters always deny a 4 card M. Seeking for 3NT quite simple actually: opener needs to stop the splintered suit, end of story.
"It may be rude to leave to go to the bathroom, but it's downright stupid to sit there and piss yourself" - blackshoe
#5
Posted 2013-August-12, 09:47
You certainly need to have an agreement with partner about major-suit distribution.
With several of my partners we play splinters over 1m as exactly 4 of the unbid major(s), 0-1 of the splinter suit, 4-5 of each minor; partner's next bid (1C-3D-3H up to 1C-3D-4D) sets trump and shows slam interest, any of his four game bids is to play.
I do agree that the alternative of denying 4-card majors is more frequently agreed, though I am not sure it is more useful in practice.
With several of my partners we play splinters over 1m as exactly 4 of the unbid major(s), 0-1 of the splinter suit, 4-5 of each minor; partner's next bid (1C-3D-3H up to 1C-3D-4D) sets trump and shows slam interest, any of his four game bids is to play.
I do agree that the alternative of denying 4-card majors is more frequently agreed, though I am not sure it is more useful in practice.
#6
Posted 2013-August-13, 02:45
Another reasonable alternative here is to use fit-jumps instead of splinters.
(-: Zel :-)
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