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2C I suppose

#1 User is offline   kenberg 

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Posted 2016-August-05, 08:21

Bbo, Imps, everyone vul, pass-pass -your call.


My thinking was that I did not much care for an auction that begins 2C-2D(waiting)-3D-3M. So I opened 1D. I might have thought a little more before doing this, because whatever I think of 2C-2D(waiting)-3D-3M, I am even less prepared to cope with the likely, and actual, 1D-1M.

As it happens, the hands are


Spades are 4-1, diamonds 3-2, so the hand is cold for 7S. I had no trouble taking 12 tricks in diamonds. Partner felt she should have raised 5D to 6D and perhaps that's so, but really I gave her an insoluble problem with this auction. +620 was +3.4 imps, beyond explanation.

Of course if I open 2C, the hands could be

or even less.

It can be a mistake to revise your strategy to fight the last war, but I think next time I open 2C. While there is no guarantee that diamonds are running in NT, and here they are not, there is also no guarantee that they are not running. If the auction starts 2C-2D-3D-3M, I will still have to judge what to do but I suppose 3NT would be, in general, the best shot. On the layout directly above, 4S would be nice.

Bridge is 90% judgement and the other half is conventions. And some good luck doesn't hurt.

Posted for general interest, comments welcome, tact unnecessary.
Ken
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#2 User is online   Cyberyeti 

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Posted 2016-August-05, 08:32

You need a gadget if you're going to open 1.

We would bid this:

1-1
2N(GF unbal)-3(semi forced)
3-3(I have a 5th one)

And now it's pretty simple, the big hand finds out partner has KQxxx and K so 7 looks very good.

What is 1-1-4 for you ?
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#3 User is offline   wank 

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Posted 2016-August-05, 08:35

you have 9 tricks in your own hand and stops in every suit. that's obviously a 2c opener, because it adds up to 3NT on its own.

but 5D was the real crime in your auction (it's a sequence i never saw before and for good reason) - aside from the impossibilty of bidding slam after that, 4S or 3NT will often be a better game.

of course not opening 2C has got you into a pickle, but rebidding 5D isn't the way to solve that. you have to manufacture a forcing bid - 2H one presumes.
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#4 User is offline   Stefan_O 

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Posted 2016-August-05, 08:46

View PostCyberyeti, on 2016-August-05, 08:32, said:

You need a gadget if you're going to open 1.

We would bid this:

1-1
2N(GF unbal)-3(semi forced)
....


If 2NT shows unbal, this looks like more than a "gadget", since you then need a way to bid 18-19 balanced, etc.
Such "gadget" is pointless, unless you explain the whole structure.

Otherwise, I have a better "gadget" for you:
  1D-1S-1NT = 20+, 3-2-7-1, and 4 aces

:)
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#5 User is offline   kenrexford 

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Posted 2016-August-05, 09:01

A curious sequence thought, perhaps.

Suppose you take Wank's suggestion and rebid 2, which seems reasonable. It occurred to me that this 2 call functionally is parallel to a sort of strange Checkback Stayman call initiated by Opener rather than Responder. I mean, Opener bids something that could well be artificial, with Responder expected to have as his primary options either (1) showing four cards in the other major or (2) showing an extra card in the original major. The only difference is a false difference. The difference is that Opener is supposedly showing something, whereas in reality he is not, because we all know that 2 could be a manufactured call.

Well, extrapolating further, why not just go all in? Why not define 2 in this sequence as "Checkback Stayman?" Or, some other term (Clarifying Checkback?). If the end result of any sequence is the same, functionally, then perhaps redefining the call for what it really is might be more accurate.

Moreover, divorcing from the concept of natural completely, to make this artificial in nature, might trigger some innovative ideas. When a call acts like an artificial bid despite being loosely defined as natural, there is a tendency to be somehow tied to the natural meaning in your thinking, even if the naturality is false. Going all in might liberate new thoughts.

This sequence is unique, I think, to two sequences:

1-1-2

1-1-2

In each, Opener has only one reverse available, and in each Responder may well be 5-4/4-5 in the majors.

In the sequence 1-1-2red, there are two reverses available, which makes the sequence not precisely the same. There are some neat options here, but that gets complicated. Suffice it to say that 2 as merely checkback would free 2 for other fun purposes.



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#6 User is online   Cyberyeti 

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Posted 2016-August-05, 09:08

View PostStefan_O, on 2016-August-05, 08:46, said:

If 2NT shows unbal, this looks like more than a "gadget", since you then need a way to bid 18-19 balanced, etc.
Such "gadget" is pointless, unless you explain the whole structure.

Otherwise, I have a better "gadget" for you:
  1D-1S-1NT = 20+, 3-2-7-1, and 4 aces

:)


Easy, we play a weak no trump and wide range 15-bad 19 1N rebid, with a good 19-21 2N, so don't need the 2N rebid for a balanced hand.

Edit: Not so easy over 1, but Gnasher proposes using 1m-1-2 for a similar purpose
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#7 User is offline   Stefan_O 

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Posted 2016-August-05, 10:15

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#8 User is offline   kenberg 

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Posted 2016-August-05, 10:51

View Postwank, on 2016-August-05, 08:35, said:

you have 9 tricks in your own hand and stops in every suit. that's obviously a 2c opener, because it adds up to 3NT on its own.

but 5D was the real crime in your auction (it's a sequence i never saw before and for good reason) - aside from the impossibility of bidding slam after that, 4S or 3NT will often be a better game.

of course not opening 2C has got you into a pickle, but rebidding 5D isn't the way to solve that. you have to manufacture a forcing bid - 2H one presumes.


I considered getting inventive but I remembered the old saw, when you find yourself deep in a hole, stop digging. Not that I am defending 5D. My thinking, roughly, was that having screwed this up by opening 1D I think I will go with 5D. It will make more often than not, and if diamonds don't run I am not dead. In NT, I might be.
I guess I am saying that while I agree that my bidding was awful, I rate the 1D opening as being worse than the 5D rebid.

A further word about philosophy. On bbo I play a lot without having detailed agreements. Part of my approach is to forego anything too inventive. While partner certainly can be thinking I might have lost my mind with that 5D call, she will have no doubt that I want to play in diamonds. If, by chance, she holds five spades (she does) and four hearts (she doesn't) and I rebid 2H I don't want her to have to try to figure out whether I do or do not mean it with that 2H call. Since I hold only two hearts, putting a hypothetical four hearts in partner's hand is not unreasonable.
For that matter, I would be reluctant to test partner with a 2H call even in a regular partnership.

But anyway, yes, I needed to open that 2C. We probably reach 7S. Not a certain contract, diamonds need not split 3-2, but maybe it still comes in if spades are 3-2. 2C-2S for starters. Even if this does not promise two of the top three, and I think that with her it does, we should be able to get there; 2C-2S-3S and then later I can use rkc to be sure of the KQ. I suppose 7S is not on ice looking at the two hands but it is pretty good.

Back to the mundane. Most often, giving pard a random hand, it will start 2C-2D(waiting)-3D. We are now pretty high and I know nothing about partner's hand. I don't usually have a second negative available after this beginning. After 2C-2D-3C, I play 3D as weak and artificial but after 2C-2D-3D I treat both 3H and 3S as natural. or maybe "more or less natural" meaning that partner has to bid and is doing his/her best.

If diamonds run I have ten tricks in NT, if one diamond must be lost I have nine tricks unless they have five tricks first.

So yes, 2C. I realize there have been a lot of advances in responses to 2C since c.1960 but we weren't playing them. And here, that would have been fine. 2C-2S and there we go.

So I am curious. With bidding agreements as described, so that often after 2C it will go 2C-2D-3D-3M, is the consensus to go with 3NT?

Added: I agree that 1D-1S-5D might be a new auction in the history of bridge.
Ken
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#9 User is offline   Stephen Tu 

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Posted 2016-August-05, 11:38

I feel fairly strongly that after you open 2c and rebid 3d, you must raise 3M with 3 cards, and responder should not introduce 4 cd suits. If you want to find 4-4 fits, play the 3M rebid= major diamond canape gadget.

You can rebid 3n if partner doesn't bid your 3cd major.

With your spade hand should get to slam easily after spade positive response to 2c.
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#10 User is offline   johnu 

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Posted 2016-August-05, 12:19

View Postwank, on 2016-August-05, 08:35, said:

of course not opening 2C has got you into a pickle, but rebidding 5D isn't the way to solve that. you have to manufacture a forcing bid - 2H one presumes.


Years ago in the Bridge World, there was a Master Solvers hand where opener was something like 3=1=8=1? (or maybe 3=8=1=1???, sorry, don't remember the details, maybe somebody else does) with jump shift strength with 2 singleton aces. The 100% score after a start of 1 - 1 was a jump shift to 3. The comment that stands out after all these years was along the line of never having a bad result by jumping in the lower ranking of your singleton aces.
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#11 User is offline   Stefan_O 

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Posted 2016-August-05, 12:35

View Postjohnu, on 2016-August-05, 12:19, said:

The comment that stands out after all these years was along the line of never having a bad result by jumping in the lower ranking of your singleton aces.

And what was the rationale for that?
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#12 User is offline   The_Badger 

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Posted 2016-August-05, 14:00

hi Kenberg,

As much as you probably dislike this comment, but I'm going to say it: I find it totally bizarre that players employ a 2 waiting bid over a 2 opener.

I'm not sure how and when this deviation (for want of a better word) came in, but to me personally there's absolutely no logic in employing it. The one thing you don't want is confusion when bidding, especially with one big hand opposite a lesser hand.

That's perhaps where the problem lies: you're trying to bid on behalf of your partner not knowing exactly what he's got.

Does the Jimmy Cayne team have this problem? Of course not, because they use controls response to a 2 bid. Given that control responses were invented by Blue Team (?), I think they have stood the test of time.

I will concede that occasionally a control response will wrongside the contract, but there's no guarantee that a waiting 2 bid will rightside a contract too.
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#13 User is offline   Winstonm 

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Posted 2016-August-05, 14:59

U pays U money; U takes U chances.
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere."
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#14 User is offline   wank 

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Posted 2016-August-05, 15:06

Does the Jimmy Cayne team have this problem? Of course not, because they use controls response to a 2 bid. Given that control responses were invented by Blue Team (?), I think they have stood the test of time.

[/quote]

i presume you men jimmy cayne himself. i can't imagine any of his pros choosing to play control responses. even garozzo has admitted it's a bad idea. i can't think of any of the modern strong club pairs who play them these days either. they're a really bad idea (oops said that already, but well, it's doubly true). they eat space for very little benefit.

the strong hand normally has some shortages. anything opposite a void is obviously not pulling its weight and similarly for kings opposite singletons
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#15 User is offline   Stefan_O 

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Posted 2016-August-05, 15:11

View PostThe_Badger, on 2016-August-05, 14:00, said:

Given that control responses were invented by Blue Team (?)


No, control responses to 2C were deployed already back in the Neolithic Era... (1930'ies or so)

Blue Team used them over strong-1C opening, where you have much more bidding room, thus is quite a different animal.
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#16 User is offline   kenberg 

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Posted 2016-August-05, 15:34

View PostThe_Badger, on 2016-August-05, 14:00, said:

hi Kenberg,

As much as you probably dislike this comment, but I'm going to say it: I find it totally bizarre that players employ a 2 waiting bid over a 2 opener.

I'm not sure how and when this deviation (for want of a better word) came in, but to me personally there's absolutely no logic in employing it. The one thing you don't want is confusion when bidding, especially with one big hand opposite a lesser hand.

That's perhaps where the problem lies: you're trying to bid on behalf of your partner not knowing exactly what he's got.

Does the Jimmy Cayne team have this problem? Of course not, because they use controls response to a 2 bid. Given that control responses were invented by Blue Team (?), I think they have stood the test of time.

I will concede that occasionally a control response will wrongside the contract, but there's no guarantee that a waiting 2 bid will rightside a contract too.


I have played controls.


History of 2D waiting: My reference to c.1960 was not totally off the wall. I have the Bobby Goldman book, Aces Scientific. The copyright is 1978 but he is discussing the methods of the Dallas Aces, evolving from 1968. Page 42, discussing the 2D response to 2C: 'Two diamonds is neutral, showing the inability to make any specific positive response. This response is used about 80% of the time". I am more than willing to believe that 2D waiting came before the Aces, but I don't know that.


Now 1978, the copyright, not to mention 1968, the founding of the Aces, is a long time ago. So no doubt there have been improved techniques. But I see it this way: It's simple, and if it was good enough for Wolff, Goldman, Lawrence, and so forth I am comfortable enough with it. In my partnerships there re many many things that are not optimal. That's ok. When I get a bad result the reason, maybe one time in ten, probably not that often, might be from not playing the optimal system. Far more often, it is from me not playing optimally. I don't much care for home grown systems, but something played by a reasonable number of high level players is fine.

Controls seems to bring out strong opinions in players. On the had we actually had, I suppose it begins 2C-2H(the bid for 2 controls, yes?) and then I bid 3D. Probably we find our spade fit and use rkc to find we have all the key cards including the Q, but 2C-2S makes it easier.

I have not found controls to be either particularly useful nor particularly harmful. I play them if partner wishes.
Ken
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#17 User is offline   ggwhiz 

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Posted 2016-August-05, 16:11

Ugly problem especially since we respond 2 to 2 even with the north hand on the principle that the most common rebid by opener is 2nt and then we can transfer, or in a shapely big hand the most likely shortage is in spades where a 2 response can be beyond awkward.

So, 2 - 2 - 3 is pretty much out of bounds for us.

After 1 - 1 I've narrowed it down to 2, 2nt, 3 or RKC and tilting towards the latter since our response with zero is 5 (float?) and with one and no Queen even a 4-3 fit has a play for slam. I can try to park it in 6 after a 5 response (1 kc) and a queen ask of 5 where partner will bid 5 if they don't have it.

I know this is colored a bit by seeing the hands and I might do any of the above at the table depending on my mood.
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#18 User is offline   The_Badger 

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Posted 2016-August-06, 00:06

View PostStefan_O, on 2016-August-05, 15:11, said:

No, control responses to 2C were deployed already back in the Neolithic Era... (1930'ies or so)

Blue Team used them over strong-1C opening, where you have much more bidding room, thus is quite a different animal.


I'm glad that I've opened up a small can of worms over the 2 waiting bid: perhaps it deserves a forum question all of its own. Thanks to wank, Stefan O and kenberg for your replies.

The reason why I bought this up is that the Larry Cohen response seems simplistic. 2 waiting except if you have 8+ HCPs and a good 5 card+ suit with 2 honours then bid it. Happens all time - not! :(

More often than not responder has anything from a Yarborough to something that may be useful but isn't substantial. (And yes, the Yarborough can be useful if it has the right shape.)

I have also noticed in the Cayne games that hands where many players would open 2 just on points and controls, especially with a minor suit holding, are opened with 1 or 1.

And that inconveniently brings us back to another question: 2 or 1? The jury's out.
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#19 User is offline   msjennifer 

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Posted 2016-August-06, 01:07

View PostCyberyeti, on 2016-August-05, 08:32, said:

You need a gadget if you're going to open 1.

We would bid this:

1-1
2N(GF unbal)-3(semi forced)
3-3(I have a 5th one)

And now it's pretty simple, the big hand finds out partner has KQxxx and K so 7 looks very good.

What is 1-1-4 for you ?

And what does he bid if he does not have the fifth spade.?How do you propose to continue the bidding further ?
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#20 User is offline   msjennifer 

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Posted 2016-August-06, 01:29

inspite of the fact that most responders will bid 2D if partner opens 2 C, I would like to insist that it is a bad policy to make it a waiting bid.If one has a positive hand,say 8plus HCP and 2 controls,and a five carder biddable major or minor it is best to bid it immediately.Whereas a 2D bidder has to make two bids to show such a hand(5 card major)It is best to adopt Precision system responses! .If one uses such responses opener immediately,with a fit,will know responder has KQxxx.It now does not matter which King he has, as any will do,7 Spades is not difficult to bid with this information.
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