Weak Two Contracts
#1
Posted 2019-January-12, 04:58
Suppose partner opens a fairly classic weak two in a major (six-card suit, not four-cards in the other major or five-card side suit, like 5-9 HCP, at least one top honor in the suit). How frequently is our best strain in partner's suit, notrump, the other major, or a minor? How common is it for 5m to be our only making game, or for our only making slam to be in some suit OTHER than partner's suit?
I'm asking mostly because this effects the choice of follow-up methods.
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#2
Posted 2019-January-12, 05:23
awm, on 2019-January-12, 04:58, said:
Don't know the answer but slightly unhappy with awm's question. IMO
- Your partnership handicaps itself if your weak-2 never contains a 4+card side-suit.
- When you have a fit, then you have conventions like half-key Gerber to explore slam. The law affords protection if you pre-empt to game with a fit.
- Successful games in other denominations might be rare but you need a mechanism to explore such possibilities.
FWIW, IMO, a new suit by responder should be F1 -- in spite of the consensus among experts to treat it as NF.
#3
Posted 2019-January-12, 07:19
nige1, on 2019-January-12, 05:23, said:
- Your partnership handicaps itself if your weak-2 never contains a 4+card side-suit.
- When you have a fit, then you have conventions like half-key Gerber to explore slam. The law affords protection if you pre-empt to game with a fit.
- Successful games in other denominations might be rare but you need a mechanism to explore such possibilities.
FWIW, IMO, a new suit by responder should be F1 -- in spite of the consensus among experts to treat it as NF.
I didn't say no four-card side suit.. it's no four-card side major. I think it's pretty common to bid this way.
Anyway, I dealt 100 hands where opener has a weak 2♠ and responder has 17+ HCP (I figured most hands with less strength would either pass or raise spades to some level). It looked like the best contract was:
2♠: 8 times
4♠: 74 times
6♠: 9 times
7♠: 1 time
3NT: 2 times
4♥: 3 times
7NT: 2 times (7♠ had the same tricks both times)
6♦: 1 time
So only one in a hundred where we wanted to play in a minor, and this was conditioned on the strong responder hand. The one 6♦ hand involved a 6-4 fit and Ax opposite Kxxxxx in spades (which could be ruffed good for discards, but would always have a second loser in spades or notrump).
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#4
Posted 2019-January-12, 07:30
Anyway, I am not surprised bit it's still very useful to know.
#5
Posted 2019-January-12, 09:16
cherdano, on 2019-January-12, 07:30, said:
Anyway, I am not surprised bit it's still very useful to know.
Single dummy, and not really looking at the actual layout of the opponents cards (some of the 4S contracts are on a finesse or a 3-2 break; I don't expect all 74 to make).
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#6
Posted 2019-January-12, 09:48
awm, on 2019-January-12, 07:19, said:
Anyway, I dealt 100 hands where opener has a weak 2♠ and responder has 17+ HCP (I figured most hands with less strength would either pass or raise spades to some level). It looked like the best contract was:
2♠: 8 times
4♠: 74 times
6♠: 9 times
7♠: 1 time
3NT: 2 times
4♥: 3 times
7NT: 2 times (7♠ had the same tricks both times)
6♦: 1 time
So only one in a hundred where we wanted to play in a minor, and this was conditioned on the strong responder hand. The one 6♦ hand involved a 6-4 fit and Ax opposite Kxxxxx in spades (which could be ruffed good for discards, but would always have a second loser in spades or notrump).
Assuming your numbers will be confirmed by bigger samples, it seems more important to explore slam in opener's suit than to explore other strains.
I guess that when playing freestyle weak twos finding the right strain with strong responding hands is more of an issue.
#8
Posted 2019-January-12, 10:08
pescetom, on 2019-January-12, 09:54, said:
About half of them were just cold, the others were roughly 50% on the best lead for the defense but had additional chances if the wrong lead was made. At a real table probably ~80% would make.
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#9
Posted 2019-January-12, 13:51
awm, on 2019-January-12, 10:08, said:
How often are ♠ games and slams reachable only by abnormal methods?
How often does reaching the rarer non-♠ games and slams require special methods?
#10
Posted 2019-January-12, 14:26
nige1, on 2019-January-12, 13:51, said:
How often does reaching the rarer non-♠ games and slams require special methods?
From the numbers awm is providing, the non-♠ opportunities are near irrelevant (10%).
I'm not sure what are normal methods for experts to seek games and slams in ♠, but playing 4♣ as Kickback and playing 2NT Ogust as the only other forcing sequence works well enough for us.
#11
Posted 2019-January-12, 19:35
awm, on 2019-January-12, 04:58, said:
Suppose partner opens a fairly classic weak two in a major (six-card suit, not four-cards in the other major or five-card side suit, like 5-9 HCP, at least one top honor in the suit). How frequently is our best strain in partner's suit, notrump, the other major, or a minor? How common is it for 5m to be our only making game, or for our only making slam to be in some suit OTHER than partner's suit?
I'm asking mostly because this effects the choice of follow-up methods.
I ran a simulation on Dealmaster Pro using your descriptions for the weak 2 bid hand using spades as trump. Random hands for responder.
For 500 double dummy plays:
3NT - ~8%
6NT - ~1%
4♥ - ~4%
6♥ - ~.2%
4♠ - ~18%
6♠ - ~4%
5♣ - ~3%
6♣ - ~1%
5♦ - ~3%
6♦ - ~1%
On this subset, if you can make
5 of a minor, you always make 4♠
4♥, you make 4♠ about 65%
3NT, you make 4♠, about 80%
#12
Posted 2019-January-13, 03:13
johnu, on 2019-January-12, 19:35, said:
For 500 double dummy plays:
3NT - ~8%
6NT - ~1%
4♥ - ~4%
6♥ - ~.2%
4♠ - ~18%
6♠ - ~4%
5♣ - ~3%
6♣ - ~1%
5♦ - ~3%
6♦ - ~1%
On this subset, if you can make
5 of a minor, you always make 4♠
4♥, you make 4♠ about 65%
3NT, you make 4♠, about 80%
On the hands where you can make 6♥/6m, how many also make 6♠/6NT?
The overall pattern I'm seeing is that hands where you have to play in a minor are pretty rare, but four-of-the-other-major is frequent enough that you'd like to able to explore for it.
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#13
Posted 2019-January-13, 03:39
#14
Posted 2019-January-13, 04:11
Also the Polish system of 2 suit hands works really well in many cases if we go away from 2/1 styles.
Sounds like more research/sim might give you more insight.
As very good question kind sir!
#15
Posted 2019-January-13, 13:56
#16
Posted 2019-January-13, 16:03
nige1, on 2019-January-12, 05:23, said:
- Your partnership handicaps itself if your weak-2 never contains a 4+card side-suit.
- When you have a fit, then you have conventions like half-key Gerber to explore slam. The law affords protection if you pre-empt to game with a fit.
- Successful games in other denominations might be rare but you need a mechanism to explore such possibilities.
FWIW, IMO, a new suit by responder should be F1 -- in spite of the consensus among experts to treat it as NF.
I have only heard the new suit NF if the new suit happened at the 2 level (2h p 2s or 2d p 2M) though I do not have much heartache when playing those bids as one round force.
#17
Posted 2019-January-15, 17:49
I'm not sure what this implies for methods. Presumably most use 3m as natural and forcing, and that seems to at least offer the potential for slam. I can't think of any compelling reason to use it for any other meaning. If we're slamming in opener's major, we have a fair amount of room starting with whatever we use 2N for: we have lots of bidding space.
I suspect, btw, that one reason I may never have bid 6m is that on most hands where that has play, either one fits the major (and so would focus on that) or one has the sort of hand where the last thing one wants, on most layouts, is to find oneself past 3N. The siren allure of 3N, with say x AJx AKJxxx KQ10 is such that one may be reluctant to bid 3D and hear partner, with his KQxxxx xxx Qxx x bid 4D. Thus one might well bid 3N (either immediately or after whatever 2N says) and miss slam opposite AQxxxx x Qxx Jxx, where 3D would fetch 4H, splinter.
I also think it highly improbable that 5m is the only making game. We need to have weakness in at least one side suit (no 3N) and yet be able to take 11 tricks, and have presumed shortness in partner's major (else the 10 trick game is more attractive or at least difficult to avoid).
#18
Posted 2019-January-15, 18:19
Must have been something like AJ10xxx, x, xx, K10xx - KQxx, xxx, Ax, AQJx
#19
Posted 2019-January-16, 16:00
Thanks in advance.
#20
Posted 2019-January-17, 19:01
phoenixmj, on 2019-January-16, 16:00, said:
Thanks in advance.
Nowadays most with a decent 6 card suit and 11 HCP open that suit at the 1 level. Some may also open 1 with 10 HCP and some meaningful distribution.