Defence to Unbalanced diamond opening
#1
Posted 2020-March-08, 14:55
In the last year my partner and I have adoped a Strong Club Unbalanced Diamond system to combine with our weak NT 5 card major. to our surprise we have had more success than expected with this system. Last night we played against a future international player and she asked what is a defence to a 1♦ opening, I had no reply, as this is a new concept I wonder what is a good defence to the 1 ♦ opening.
Love to hear any suggestions, because beside dbl showing an equilvalant hand or naturl bidding, the question stumpted me. BTW I am a long way off even Regional class.
Thanks in advance
Conor
#2
Posted 2020-March-08, 22:16
#4
Posted 2020-March-09, 02:09
sfi, on 2020-March-08, 22:19, said:
Yes, thats true. I assumed it was just a precision diamond opening with the weak notrump hands taken out, by a pair who are never dealt a balanced 15ct.
#5
Posted 2020-March-09, 03:34
But just because it states 'unbalanced', it doesn't mean it can't have a good ♦ suit.
#6
Posted 2020-March-09, 04:31
Vampyr, on 2020-March-09, 02:09, said:
Given the question asked by the future international player, my initial guess is that 1D shows any unbalanced hand without a 5-card major. But that's just a wild guess.
#7
Posted 2020-March-09, 09:06
#8
Posted 2020-March-09, 09:53
mikestar13, on 2020-March-09, 09:06, said:
I dislike that delayed doubles of 1NT are penalties but I like the idea that 1NT is 4M5m. At this point it looks a lot like a variation of Multilandy so we could add in 2 of the other minor as 6M too. Multigrunt
#9
Posted 2020-March-09, 10:29
It is my pure guess that the Strong club system being used by OP shows a 1D opening where D suit may be ZERO plus.Either a 12/14.13/15,14/16 or 15/17 or a variable NT and 17 plus 1C ,A 2C opening (11 to 16)with 5 or more clubs with or without a 4 card major (one or both).In my personal opinion this will require a plethora of natural and artificial bids like the inverted minors/Majors which can be added on studying the actual distributional and flat hands.(available readily online ) or actually dealing the cards.
#10
Posted 2020-March-09, 11:35
Indeed I didn't explain the Unbalanced Diamond, :- It is borrowed from Miles Marshall and indicates 11-14 hcp where there is no 5+ card major and a balanced weak NT can't be opened.
Conor
#11
Posted 2020-March-09, 20:38
00Conor, on 2020-March-09, 11:35, said:
Indeed I didn't explain the Unbalanced Diamond, :- It is borrowed from Miles Marshall and indicates 11-14 hcp where there is no 5+ card major and a balanced weak NT can't be opened.
Conor
And what are you using a 2♣ opening for? What are you opening with balanced 15?
#12
Posted 2020-March-09, 21:53
Either way, I think I would suggest 2♦ in direct seat to be natural rather than Michaels, but otherwise (i.e. in balancing seat and in convoluted auctions) treat diamonds as "their" suit. When one or both opps have shown some other suit (but opener is still not confirmed to have diamonds), we treat the shown suit as "their" suit and we can bid diamonds ourselves naturally.
There may be something technically better, maybe involving transfer overcalls or such, but I think the above is good enough.
#13
Posted 2020-March-09, 22:15
helene_t, on 2020-March-09, 21:53, said:
Either way, I think I would suggest 2♦ in direct seat to be natural rather than Michaels, but otherwise (i.e. in balancing seat and in convoluted auctions) treat diamonds as "their" suit. When one or both opps have shown some other suit (but opener is still not confirmed to have diamonds), we treat the shown suit as "their" suit and we can bid diamonds ourselves naturally.
There may be something technically better, maybe involving transfer overcalls or such, but I think the above is good enough.
I think this will also spend on whether 5♣4M hands are opened 2♣. Then their 1♦ opening is ordinary precision, and this is best treated as natural.
#14
Posted 2020-March-12, 16:40
00Conor, on 2020-March-09, 11:35, said:
I'd still play double as takeout, but it should focus on trying to find major fits more than normal. Partner should bid a major in preference to a minor since you may well not have support for clubs when you double. You would still use diamond bids as the cue bid in subsequent auctions, since with real diamonds you would have done something else earlier in the auction. Two simple examples may clarify:
(1D) - X - (P) - 2D: Shows a strong hand since partner can just pass with good diamonds.
(1D) - X - (P) - 1S: Still shows a strong hand since with good diamonds you would not have doubled the previous round.
(P) - 2D
Major suit overcalls can be natural and unchanged. 1NT is also unchanged, but you may be more likely to fudge a diamond stopper and less likely to bid it with two small clubs. If opener shows their suit after a 1NT overcall, your side may want to check for a stopper in that suit before committing to 3NT.
You do want a way to show natural suits in either minor, and there are two easy ways to do so.
1. Give up a Michaels cue bid and treat 2/3D and 2/3C all as natural bids.
2. Keep 2D as Michaels (showing 5/5 in the majors) and play 3D as a natural overcall showing a diamond suit. Here 2C/3C would still be natural.
Finally, what is an unusual 2NT overcall? It probably makes sense to keep it as whatever you normally do, which is probably showing the two lower unbid suits (probably hearts and clubs).
In summary, most of your bids stay the same. The double should focus more on the majors and you have to make a decision about what a 2D overcall shows. In either case a 3D overcall should probably be natural.
#16
Posted 2020-March-16, 13:07
helene_t, on 2020-March-09, 21:53, said:
Either way, I think I would suggest 2♦ in direct seat to be natural rather than Michaels, but otherwise (i.e. in balancing seat and in convoluted auctions) treat diamonds as "their" suit. When one or both opps have shown some other suit (but opener is still not confirmed to have diamonds), we treat the shown suit as "their" suit and we can bid diamonds ourselves naturally.
There may be something technically better, maybe involving transfer overcalls or such, but I think the above is good enough.
Hi Helene
We open 2♣ showing an unbalanced 19+ hcp with a 5 card major. Those 6+ ♣ hands also fall into the 1♦ opening.
thank you for your suggestion, the first priority we have is to investigate a major fit, so you are right if one is established it becomes "our" suit and they are free to bid ♦s naturally.
Conor
#17
Posted 2020-March-16, 13:11
sfi, on 2020-March-12, 16:40, said:
(1D) - X - (P) - 2D: Shows a strong hand since partner can just pass with good diamonds.
(1D) - X - (P) - 1S: Still shows a strong hand since with good diamonds you would not have doubled the previous round.
(P) - 2D
Major suit overcalls can be natural and unchanged. 1NT is also unchanged, but you may be more likely to fudge a diamond stopper and less likely to bid it with two small clubs. If opener shows their suit after a 1NT overcall, your side may want to check for a stopper in that suit before committing to 3NT.
You do want a way to show natural suits in either minor, and there are two easy ways to do so.
1. Give up a Michaels cue bid and treat 2/3D and 2/3C all as natural bids.
2. Keep 2D as Michaels (showing 5/5 in the majors) and play 3D as a natural overcall showing a diamond suit. Here 2C/3C would still be natural.
Finally, what is an unusual 2NT overcall? It probably makes sense to keep it as whatever you normally do, which is probably showing the two lower unbid suits (probably hearts and clubs).
In summary, most of your bids stay the same. The double should focus more on the majors and you have to make a decision about what a 2D overcall shows. In either case a 3D overcall should probably be natural.
Hi SFI
Thank you for your reply, I think it is a good summamry with the 3♦s as natural and 2♦s as major showing and otherwise natural.
Conor