Open 2S?
#1
Posted 2020-May-22, 10:18
#2
Posted 2020-May-22, 11:12
I suppose the way in which this goes wrong is if you end up going -200 due to misplaying the hand severely, or some freakish deal where opponents have incredible defence but no game. This is acceptable though, because, when weighed against the slams they will sometimes miss, and the games they will sometimes miss, and the times that you will make, or the times that down 1 is wins you an imp or two... The potential to gain is pretty evident. The nightmare is when you preempt partner and miss game yourself, which is one of the primary reasons that 2nd seat vulnerable preempts should be solid preempts. We can't have partner guessing whether or not vulnerable game is making.
#3
Posted 2020-May-22, 11:39
#7
Posted 2020-May-22, 13:12
Note: I have played everything from purely constructive "weak" 2 bids a la Schenken to "5+ cards is a mandatory open, yes, even 65432", and everything in between. There is no such thing as a "weak 2", just what you and your partner expect. Keeping partner happy is more important than your result on one board from a gamble (and that's what a preempt is, right?)
#8
Posted 2020-May-22, 14:53
#9
Posted 2020-May-22, 15:19
#10
Posted 2020-May-22, 19:41
#11
Posted 2020-May-23, 01:48
#1 red. vs. green it would be too weak for us in 1st and (esp. in 2nd), but we are pretty / extrem conservative with this
part. colors, I would also assume, that absent part. agreements, it should be ok to open 2S
#2 it does not really matter, what happens in 2S, more important is the question, how much does partner need to act, if he has
got something
With kind regards
Marlowe
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#12
Posted 2020-May-23, 02:02
By far the more important question in an expert partnership is the partnership expectation rather than individual valuation. There are certainly pairs who would open this routinely and pairs who would not, but that's because they have discussed and agreed a style that works for them. For what it's worth, I would open this with some partners and pass with others.
Knowing partnership style is important. Larry Cohen gives a hand in one of his books (some 21 count if I recall correctly) where he would have looked for slam opposite a 2S opener from David Berkowitz but passed had Marty Bergen opened 2S.
#14
Posted 2020-May-23, 04:13
iandayre, on 2020-May-22, 19:41, said:
Win some, lose some. 2♠ always even red/green.
#15
Posted 2020-May-23, 08:56
I remember, years ago, opening AJ98xx with a side Queen, so an equivalent hand, feeling unhappy. Fortunately, our opps defended a little less successfully than my teammates and my 800 won 7 imps😀
#16
Posted 2020-May-23, 19:10
mikeh, on 2020-May-23, 08:56, said:
I remember, years ago, opening AJ98xx with a side Queen, so an equivalent hand, feeling unhappy. Fortunately, our opps defended a little less successfully than my teammates and my 800 won 7 imps😀
Agreed completely.
#17
Posted 2020-May-24, 04:04
iandayre, on 2020-May-22, 19:41, said:
Considering that with that hand you have 3 tricks that are 100 % guaranteed (losing 7 side suit cards + 3 trumps), the opponents (and your team mates) must have had pretty darn good cards that are lying very well for them to take 8 tricks with spades as trumps. I consider it likely that they were able to take 12 tricks with another trump suit. Perhaps you should have won a fwe IMPs (if your team mates would have come with a score of 920, or higher). If they couldnot produce a slam (possible, but unlikely), you were very unlucky.
Rik
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the new discoveries, is not “Eureka!” (I found it!), but “That’s funny…” – Isaac Asimov
The only reason God did not put "Thou shalt mind thine own business" in the Ten Commandments was that He thought that it was too obvious to need stating. - Kenberg
#18
Posted 2020-May-25, 10:23
mycroft, on 2020-May-22, 13:12, said:
If this is the first time you've gone for 800 into nothing after a preempt, congratulations. It won't be your last. On the other hand, if you never go for 800 into nothing on a preempt, I guarantee you you're going
Back on the first hand (blackshoe would tell me I'm saying that wrong, of course) one of our opponents after one particular disaster said it was the first time she had gone 1100 in her life. She has 1500 Masterpoints and has been playing "forever". I was just shocked - but then again, my first grand slam, playing with my teacher in my first ever tournament, went -6 for 14. For a great matchpoint score. I guess I learned early.
The thing about playing with experts is that they defend better, and they make shakier doubles of
#19
Posted 2020-May-27, 12:02
The dreaded 6,3,2,2, at red is not worth the risk, in my opinion.
I pass on the basis that I’ll get a chance to show the boss suit later, or it will become apparent from what they bid that I have it.
D.
#20
Posted 2020-May-27, 12:14
Dinarius, on 2020-May-27, 12:02, said:
The dreaded 6,3,2,2, at red is not worth the risk, in my opinion.
I pass on the basis that I’ll get a chance to show the boss suit later, or it will become apparent from what they bid that I have it.
D.
Yes, it will certainly be safer to bid spades after the opponents have fully described their hands. If you don't open a decent weak 2 bid with a weak 2 bid, it is unlikely that anybody except you will know that you had one and passed.