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Introducing a new convention: Lee Two Diamonds

Poll: Introducing a new convention: Lee Two Diamonds (24 member(s) have cast votes)

Finesse or play to drop the king?

  1. Finesse (24 votes [100.00%] - View)

    Percentage of vote: 100.00%

  2. Drop (0 votes [0.00%])

    Percentage of vote: 0.00%

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#201 User is offline   hrothgar 

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Posted 2017-January-10, 05:15

The numeric one has been away for a long time.

His initial post has been constructive.
I see no reason to immediately dig up old dirt.
Alderaan delenda est
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#202 User is offline   kwiktrix 

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Posted 2017-January-11, 13:16

Not having the free time to peruse your 187 page tome (is it available as an ePub on Amazon?) covering one infrequent eponymous bid (note that other major conventions named after their 'inventors' were named by 3rd parties, Jacoby and Stayman did not name their own conventions), I can't help but notice that you don't have a Section relating to "Dealing with Interference". Since responder doesn't know what opener has until opener rebids, what does responder do in the following auction, one that would be not be unusual after a 2D opening?

2D (3C) ??

Give responder (H=A/K):
1) x Hxx Hxxxx Hxxx
2) xx xxx Hxxxx Hxx
3) x Hxxxx Hxx Hxxx
4) x Hxxx Hxxxx xxx

What do you respond in each case? 3H or 3D or P?

Now give opener the 64M hand (which based on the overcall is more likely than not in each of these four cases), and continue the auction after your response:

2D (3C) ?? (5C)

Wow - I wish I'd opened 1M. At least responder could have added some value to the auction...

In fairness, you appear to have invested a considerable amount of time in developing a self-named conventional bid that occurs far less frequently than either a multi 2D (with 5+M) or a simple weak 2D (with 5+D), yet supersedes very descriptive openings like 1M (or 1oM canape), 2D, 3D, or 2N. I applaud the effort.

Unfortunately, I won't use it - besides the lack of any tangible benefit within any system I've ever played, it doesn't even come close to being legal for GCC or Mid-Chart play in the ACBL, either as an opening bid or a direct overcall over 1N.

Kurt
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#203 User is offline   Vampyr 

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Posted 2017-January-11, 23:41

View Postkwiktrix, on 2017-January-11, 13:16, said:

Not having the free time to peruse your 187 page tome (is it available as an ePub on Amazon?) covering one infrequent eponymous bid (note that other major conventions named after their 'inventors' were named by 3rd parties, Jacoby and Stayman did not name their own conventions), I can't help but notice that you don't have a Section relating to "Dealing with Interference". Since responder doesn't know what opener has until opener rebids, what does responder do in the following auction, one that would be not be unusual after a 2D opening?

2D (3C) ??

Give responder (H=A/K):
1) x Hxx Hxxxx Hxxx
2) xx xxx Hxxxx Hxx
3) x Hxxxx Hxx Hxxx
4) x Hxxx Hxxxx xxx

What do you respond in each case? 3H or 3D or P?

Now give opener the 64M hand (which based on the overcall is more likely than not in each of these four cases), and continue the auction after your response:

2D (3C) ?? (5C)

Wow - I wish I'd opened 1M. At least responder could have added some value to the auction...

In fairness, you appear to have invested a considerable amount of time in developing a self-named conventional bid that occurs far less frequently than either a multi 2D (with 5+M) or a simple weak 2D (with 5+D), yet supersedes very descriptive openings like 1M (or 1oM canape), 2D, 3D, or 2N. I applaud the effort.

Unfortunately, I won't use it - besides the lack of any tangible benefit within any system I've ever played, it doesn't even come close to being legal for GCC or Mid-Chart play in the ACBL, either as an opening bid or a direct overcall over 1N.

Kurt


Surely you can play any method you like over an opening 1NT, even in the ACBL?
I know not with what weapons World War III will be fought, but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones -- Albert Einstein
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#204 User is offline   sfi 

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Posted 2017-January-11, 23:55

View PostVampyr, on 2017-January-11, 23:41, said:

Surely you can play any method you like over an opening 1NT, even in the ACBL?


That's just crazy talk. It's only recently that you could use a devastating weapon like 2D = single-suited major.
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#205 User is offline   Zelandakh 

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Posted 2017-January-12, 07:49

View Postsfi, on 2017-January-11, 23:55, said:

That's just crazy talk. It's only recently that you could use a devastating weapon like 2D = single-suited major.

It is not that much longer that the EBU has allowed such weirdness as conventional (non-penalty) doubles against 1NT. David Stevenson's 1NT defence list used to provide a reference as to which defences were legal under the GCC and EBU Level 3 to assist with this.
(-: Zel :-)
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#206 User is offline   kwiktrix 

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Posted 2017-January-17, 15:29

View PostVampyr, on 2017-January-11, 23:41, said:

Surely you can play any method you like over an opening 1NT, even in the ACBL?

Over 1N, it was only as recently as AUG2016 that 2D could even be a true 'multi' (either major). Otherwise it has to have at least one known anchor suit. And for Dan's edification that's 100% known - not 76%...

However, the ACBL allows any 'non-destructive' method as a defense to an artificial opening. So defenses to strong 1C or 2C (or even any short club that does not meet the exacting 4=4=3=2 natural standard) can be as aggressive as one desires. In my case, I like super-canapé 1M with psycho-suction 1N-2N.
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#207 User is offline   mycroft 

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Posted 2017-January-17, 17:31

Of course, in 1990, you could play any defence you wanted to natural 1NT openers on the GCC...

And, yes, you can play anything you like after *your side* has opened a natural 1NT (barring the evil ones. Expect that with the revisions, that will go away, because you will no longer be allowed to open the evil ones).
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#208 User is offline   32519 

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Posted 2017-January-23, 06:21

AN EXTRACT FROM CHAPTER ONE

Let us take a look at what the teams participating in the 2011 Bermuda Bowl used the 2♦ bid for. With 22 teams participating and three pairs per team gives us 66 convention cards to scrutinize. The players were the top representatives from their respective countries and therefore whatever they used the 2♦ bid for was considered to be a reasonable barometer as to what others can expect to use it for. Below is a summary of what was found:

25 = Multi (this was predominantly the “weak only” version)
17 = Natural Weak 2♦
4 = Ekrens
3 = Flannery
5 = Mexican
2 = Precision
5 = ACOL 2
5 = Other
66

This same data can be represented differently:
25.8% = Natural Weak 2♦
22.7% = Value showing bid (Flannery, Mexican, Precision, ACOL 2)
48.5% = Sub Total
43.9% = Multi / Ekrens
7.6% = Other
100.0% = Total




With 25 pairs playing Multi, it is necessary to also look at what the 2♥ and 2♠ bids were used for.

32 = Weak 2♥
9 = Constructive 2♥
14 = Some form of Muiderberg (5X♥ / 4+m)
2 = Precision
9 = Other
66 = Total

35 = Weak 2♠
8 = Constructive 2♠
15 = Some form of Muiderberg (5X♠ / 4+m)
8 = Other
66 = Total

These figures make for some interesting reading. The 25 pairs with Multi on their convention cards were predominantly playing the “weak only” version. The 2♦ bid showed a weak two in either major. The 2♥ and 2♠ bids respectively were being used for either, a constructive (sound) opening, or showing a two-suited hand.

Richard Pavlicek has compared opening bid choices in 65 major events from 1996 to 2012. Source data consists of 66,652 results (33,326 deals) from vugraph archives of the Vanderbilt, Spingold, U.S. Championship and World Team Championship. For each comparison, results are shown in four time spans: past four years, past eight years, past 12 years, and all data (17 years). Changing percentages and/or winners over time sometimes reveals a trend. Among this data is a comparison of what the 2♦ bid was used for.





This is what he found:

1. Flannery versus not

Year Winner Boards IMP Percent WLT Percent
2009-2012 Flannery 54 159-96 = 62.35 23-17-14 = 55.56
2005-2012 Flannery 74 221-143 = 60.71 30-27-17 = 52.03
2001-2012 Flannery 91 255-179 = 58.76 36-34-21 = 51.10
1996-2012 Flannery 109 314-224 = 58.36 42-41-26 = 50.46

2. Multi versus not

Year Winner Boards IMP Percent WLT Percent
2009-2012 Not 97 223-199 = 52.84 33-35-29 = 48.97
2005-2012 Multi 165 371-362 = 50.61 61-55-49 = 51.82
2001-2012 Multi 237 548-476 = 53.52 92-76-69 = 53.38
1996-2012 Multi 293 695-642 = 51.98 109-102-82 = 51.19

3. Weak 2♦ versus not

Year Winner Boards IMP Percent WLT Percent
2009-2012 Weak 2D 88 268-167 = 61.61 43-27-18 = 59.09
2005-2012 Weak 2D 139 377-297 = 55.93 59-46-34 = 54.68
2001-2012 Weak 2D 178 481-309 = 60.89 82-49-47 = 59.27
1996-2012 Weak 2D 211 552-388 = 58.72 96-64-51 = 57.58
Of these three tables, the one “Multi versus not,” shows a very interesting trend. There is a steady decline in the number of hands being opened Multi in the events from which this data was gathered. But even more interesting is the fact that over the four most recent years, 2009-2012, Multi openings were an overall loser. This must surely be ascribed to the fact that more and more top-class players are exploiting all the inherent weaknesses of the Multi to their advantage. Players are no longer wary of the bid. Also defences against it are becoming more sophisticated.

Clearly the Multi as it was originally designed has lost its allure, now being used primarily as “weak only.” Yet the author still believes that a multi purpose bid which caters for different and/or awkward hand patterns which have a lower frequency of occurrence should still have a place in every bidding system. Grouping them together into a single bid makes the use of the bid more attractive. So what exactly are some of these hand patterns and how can they be included into a multi purpose bid? That is the subject of this book: The Multi Two Diamonds – Revisited and Reengineered as Lee Two Diamonds.
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#209 User is offline   Zelandakh 

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Posted 2017-January-23, 10:33

Noone seriously believes that opening a Multi 2 is better than opening a natural Weak 2. The point of using the Multi is to be reclaim the 2M openings for another purpose. Many pairs believe that the overall package is then stronger than Weak 2M openings plus some 2 opening. But you should know this - it has been pointed out to you enough times. It is also notable that no pair is using your convention in one of the few events that would actually allow it (given that it is Brown Sticker).
(-: Zel :-)
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#210 User is offline   gwnn 

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Posted 2017-January-23, 11:09

what about the Secret Bridge Olympics?
... and I can prove it with my usual, flawless logic.
      George Carlin
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#211 User is offline   johnu 

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Posted 2017-January-23, 18:08

I am shocked that unlike fine wine, the Lee Two Diamonds convention is not more appealing with age.
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#212 User is offline   32519 

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Posted 2017-January-28, 17:09

EXTRACT FROM CHAPTER 9

THE LEE 2♦ AS A DEFENCE TO THE OPPONENTS 1NT

Over the years literally dozens of different defences to the opponents 1NT opening bid have been developed. Most of these defences have two things in common, a) they attempt to describe as many different hand patterns as possible by the player sitting in the direct seat, and b) they are focused towards showing major suit 2-suited hands. The Lee 2♦ convention can be added to this long list of defensive agreements by making some minor adjustments as to what a 2♦ overcall of the 1NT bid promises, and then adding a meaning to what the following bids mean, a) double, b) 2♣, c) 2♥, d) 2♠ and e) 2NT. Any bid above 2NT would be considered to be a natural pre-empt based on suit quality and vulnerability.

Retentions, adjustments and additions to what a Lee 2♦ overcall means:
1. As the opponents have opened the bidding with 1NT, the natural weak 2♦ option falls away.
2. The strong major suit orientated hands and the strong minor suit orientated hands need to be separately identifiable to facilitate the continuation bidding. To this end a 2♦ overcall is reserved for all major suit orientated hands of opening strength or better, with some further adjustments and additions –
a. The big 6/4 hand pattern, 10-15 HCP is retained
b. Big 5/5 hand patterns, 10-15 HCP get included
c. Big 5/4 or 4/5 Flannery type hand patterns, 11-15 HCP get included
d. The big 4441 hand pattern, 16+ HCP is retained but with the following adjustments, a) it guarantees that the singleton is in either minor suit, and b) the HCP range gets lowered to 12+ HCP in order to raise the frequency of occurrence. When the singleton is in either major suit, the player in the direct seat may have no other choice than to defend.
All of the above hand patterns have been adjusted to meet the requirements of the Rule of Twenty.
3. The big 5/5 hand pattern in the minors, 14+ HCP is retained but it gets moved out of the 2♦ bid into the 2NT bid. Since the opponents have opened the bidding with 1NT, a natural overcall of 2NT is not required.
4. The natural Weak Two in Diamonds is not altogether lost, as, in the same way as the rest of the convention, partner is allowed to pass the 2♦ overcall with a hand that is completely useless outside of a diamond contract.

The meaning of the additional bids included into this defensive agreement to the opponents 1NT opening bid are –
1. Double = single suited hand in either minor suit. Partner is requested to bid 2♣ as pass/correct.
2. 2♣ = any 5/4 or better holding in a competitive hand better suited for offence than for defence, whether that be above or below opening strength values, but with this proviso – it guarantees that the 5-card suit is in either major. A 5/4 holding in the majors below opening strength values is also possible.
3. 2♥/2♠ = natural and a 6-card suit
4. 2NT = 5/5 in the minors, 14+ HCP

Let’s look at some typical auctions:

A takeout double of the 1NT opening bid shows a single suited hand in either minor. Partner is required to bid 2♣ as pass/correct, unless holding a single suited hand in the majors. Obviously major suits score better, and partner can choose to play in his own suit. The author does not want to be prescriptive to any partnership as to, a) the overall suit quality of the minor, and b) the overall hand strength required for the takeout double. The times when the opponents allow you to play in 2m will be few, and then more often than not, every time opener’s partner is very weak implying that between the doubler and his partner, a fair amount of the remaining HCP are held.
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#213 User is offline   Zelandakh 

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Posted 2017-February-01, 04:09

The 2 overcall is way overloaded here. You cannot both play in the long major and sort out the right fit with both majors, which is going to come up a lot. You would be better off taking out the 5-4 and 5-5 major 2-suited hands into 2 (instead of splitting these by range), whereupon you are only playing a weaker form of Multi-Landy rather than something completely unworkable.
(-: Zel :-)
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#214 User is offline   32519 

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Posted 2017-February-07, 08:35

CHAPTER 10

WHY ALSO A 7-CARD DIAMOND SUIT IN THE OPENING BID?

The hand below occurred during a club game at the beginning of 2014. The actual bidding and result are included:
___________________________________________________________

West North East South Hand 1 North
P P E-W Vul S AKJ543
P 2C P 3H H 7
P 3S P 4S D AKQT97
P 4NT P 5D West C -- East
P 5H P 5S S Q S T62
P P P H T8652 H AQ
D J65 D 842
C A532 South C QT874
S 987
H KJ943
5S North D 3 Made 6
Lead: D8 C KJ96 +480
___________________________________________________________

Our system agreements for the continuation bidding structure after a 2♣ opening bid are briefly summarised as follows –
• 2♦ = any positive response, 4-7 HCP
• 2♥ = the so-called “double-negative,” 0-3 HCP
• 2♠ = natural, 5-card suit, 8+ HCP
• 2N = natural, balanced, 8-10 HCP
• 3♣ = natural, 5-card suit, 8+ HCP
• 3♦ = natural, 5-card suit, 8+ HCP
• 3♥ = natural, 5-card suit, 8+ HCP
• 3N = natural, balanced, 11-13 HCP, forcing to small slam

In the auction posted, 4NT was asking about keycards, 5♦ showed zero, 5♥ was asking about the ♠Q, and 5♠ was a signoff denying holding it. The hand was soon forgotten until a few weeks later a similar hand was picked up at another club game. This is what happened:

___________________________________________________________

West North East South Hand 2 North
P P 2C None Vul S J732
3C P P 3D H 98742
P 3H P 3S D --
P P P West C 8653 East
S 95 S 64
H KQ53 H JT6
D J D KQ873
C AQT972 South C KJ4
S AKQT8
H A
3S South D AT96542 Made 6
Lead: HK C -- +230
___________________________________________________________

Both contracts made 12 tricks, although slam was bid in neither. In hand 1 at least we reached game, not so with hand 2. Hand 2 was further muddied by West’s overcall. With both hands, at minimum you want to drive to game in either of your two suits. It was after hand 2 that we started sharing ideas with each other about how our system agreements need to be amended to adequately describe these big 2-suited hand types. We also embarked on a process of collecting actual hands from actual club games to see whether our amended system agreements would get us to the optimal contract. Our initial ideas have already undergone a number of further modifications as more actual hands exposed new problems in bidding them. At this point it needs to be emphasised that our current system agreements which follow for bidding these hand types is by no means final. They are presented here for two reasons, a) why the 2♦ opening bid may include a 7-card diamond suit, and b) for others to consider and develop further for possible inclusion into their own partnership agreements.
This is where we currently stand regarding big 2-suited hands which want to, at minimum, drive to game in either suit. Thus far it is always for a major/minor 2-suiter, and always at minimum a 6/5 holding.
• 3♠ = natural, 7-card suit, 6-11 HCP NV, 9-11 HCP V
• 3♥ = transfer to 3♠, big 2-suiter, spades and an undisclosed minor
• 3♦ = transfer to 3♥, one of two possible hand patterns
o a 7-card heart suit, 6-11 HCP NV, 9-11 HCP V, or
o a big 2-suiter, hearts and an undisclosed minor
• 3♣ = natural, 7-card suit, 6-11 HCP NV, 9-11 HCP V
• 2N = natural, 20-21 HCP, balanced
This scheme does have two downsides, a) we lose a natural 3♦ pre-empt which has a much higher frequency of occurrence than big 2-suited hands, and b) it allows the opponents to double the 3♦ bid to show holding the suit at no expense to themselves. The upside is that we don’t lose the 3♦ pre-empt altogether as the 7-card suit lands up in the 2♦ opening bid.

Let’s look at some more hands from actual club games and the further modifications which this scheme has already undergone.
___________________________________________________________

West North East South Hand 3 North
3H P 3S 4D None Vul S A86
5C P 5S P H Q8532
P P D 43
West C 972 East
S KQJ753 S T42
H J6 H AT74
D -- D 876
C AKQJ8 South C 654
S 9
H K9
5S East D AKQJT952 Made 5
Lead: DA C T3 +450
___________________________________________________________

On this hand the transfer opening bid worked well. East had a 3-card fit in both of opener’s suits and knew that the ♥A was covering one of the 2-cards outside of the big 2-suiter. A final contract of 5♦X only fails by 1 trick.

___________________________________________________________

West North East South Hand 4 North
P E-W Vul S AJT65
3D P 3H P H 9
4D P 4H P D 75
P P West C QT982 East
S K S 9742
H AK643 H 82
D AKQT98 D J43
C 5 South C AJ74
S Q83
H QJT75
4H East D 62 Down 1
Lead: HQ C K63 -100
___________________________________________________________

On this hand East tried for the heart game, knowing again that the ♣A was taking care of one of opener’s 2-cards outside of the big 2-suiter. The contract failed by one on a bad trump break, compounded by the fact that declarer was playing in a 5-2 trump fit.
___________________________________________________________

West North East South Hand 5 North
3H P 3S E-W Vul S AKQT763
P 4D P 5D H 3
P 6D P P D AQJ72
P West C -- East
S J8 S 954
H 94 H Q872
D T654 D K
C AKQ93 South C T8765
S 2
H AKJT65
6D North D 983 Made 6
Lead: CT C J42 +920
___________________________________________________________

Here South has an obvious preference for the diamond suit which North raised to 6♦ based on the club void. Only 7/14 tables managed to reach the slam.
The final two hands presented in this chapter are included to show the modifications which the original ideas have undergone. They too are actual hands from club games.
___________________________________________________________

West North East South Hand 6 North
P None Vul S T753
3H P 4C P H 98752
5C P P P D 52
West C A9 East
S AKJ864 S 9
H A H QT6
D AKT93 D J7
C 3 South C KQJT842
S Q2
H KJ43
5C East D Q864 Made 5
Lead: H3 C 765 +400
___________________________________________________________

In this hand, East, who can see a major catastrophe looming on obvious misfitting hands, breaks the transfer by bidding his own long suit. The premise is straightforward; the hand is going to be of little use to West in either a spade or diamond contract, whereas the West hand is going to be able to provide tricks for the East hand in the said suits. Despite holding only the measly ♣3, North raises to game as he can provide 5 top tricks in the three remaining suits.

___________________________________________________________

West North East South Hand 7 North
3H Both Vul S --
P P P H Q9876432
D QT53
West C 9 East
S KJ75 S 932
H AT5 H K
D K9842 D AJ76
C 6 South C Q7532
S AQT864
H J
3H South D -- Down 1
Lead: D2 C AKJT84 -100
___________________________________________________________

With this hand North has an 8-card heart suit but no guarantee that South’s other suit is diamonds, and passes. When dummy comes down declarer can see that the hand is a hopeless misfit. On the diamond lead the contract fails by 1 trick.

The scheme presented here requires virtually no memory load other than the following, a) a 3-level opening bid in the black suits is natural, and b) a 3-level opening bid in the red suits is a transfer bid. After that everything is logical and straightforward.

To close off this chapter it needs to be repeated again: this scheme is by no means final. As more problem hands are encountered at the table it will undergo further refinement.

Anyone wishing to experiment with this scheme are encouraged to also gather actual hands with actual results and make any additional modifications to that which is presented here.
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#215 User is offline   Vampyr 

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Posted 2017-February-07, 12:39

I am not promising to read your overlong post, but no one at all will read it unless you put the hands in diagrams. They are gibberish at present.

I will make one comment, though. Do not let the partner of the 2 bidder to bid NT naturally, or in fact any time NT is likely to be the final contract. Though you could plug a hole in your scheme by making it a positive.
I know not with what weapons World War III will be fought, but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones -- Albert Einstein
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#216 User is online   nullve 

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Posted 2017-February-07, 13:29

View PostVampyr, on 2017-February-07, 12:39, said:

I am not promising to read your overlong post, but no one at all will read it unless you put the hands in diagrams. They are gibberish at present.

I just discovered by accident that the diagrams are easily readable (in the editor window) if you click on the 'Reply' button on his post.
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#217 User is offline   Vampyr 

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Posted 2017-February-07, 17:18

View Postnullve, on 2017-February-07, 13:29, said:

I just discovered by accident that the diagrams are easily readable (in the editor window) if you click on the 'Reply' button on his post.


No, nothing is easily readable on my device. He should use the hand diagrams.
I know not with what weapons World War III will be fought, but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones -- Albert Einstein
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#218 User is offline   Vampyr 

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Posted 2017-February-07, 17:30

View PostVampyr, on 2017-February-07, 17:18, said:

No, nothing is easily readable on my device. He should use the hand diagrams.


Mods please delete.
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#219 User is online   nullve 

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Posted 2017-February-08, 10:37

View Postnullve, on 2017-January-10, 03:56, said:

Without the 10-15, 6M4OM option your 2 opening would obviously no longer be a BS. So why don't you open 1M with that? (Sorry if you've already explained.)

View PostZelandakh, on 2017-January-10, 04:28, said:

It was, at great length. As I recall the OP does not accept that his convention is any different from any other form of Multi and therefore treats it as such for system regulations, including explanations to the opps. :o :unsure: :ph34r:

I've re-read the whole thread several times and I still have no idea why 32519 opens 2 (Lee) instead of 1M with this hand type. But I also don't know what his 1M openings look like, so maybe he's including this hand type in 2 to fill a hole.
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#220 User is offline   32519 

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Posted 2017-February-09, 02:49

View Postnullve, on 2017-February-08, 10:37, said:

I've re-read the whole thread several times and I still have no idea why 32519 opens 2 (Lee) instead of 1M with this hand type. But I also don't know what his 1M openings look like, so maybe he's including this hand type in 2 to fill a hole.

The 6M/4M hand pattern 10-15 HCP has a low frequency of occurrence. However if you know about it early enough in the auction, it assists in bidding games and/or slams with hands low in HCPs but a good distributional fit otherwise. Refer to the OP. There slam was reached on a combined HCP holding of only 18. I have plenty of actual hands where game was reached and making because the hand distribution was known, where others stopped short of game.

My 1M openings promise a 5-card suit. 5/4 Flannery type hands are all opened 1M. The 6M/4M hands get opened as part of this convention for the reasons stated above.
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