Winstonm, on 2021-November-02, 12:52, said:
What is your rebid if partner bids 1NT?
My 1NT is 6-9 with the occasional soft 10, and denies three spades. So I have an easy pass. The 10-11 (semi)balanced hands without spade support go through 2
♣ (artificial) in my system. In some sense this is a chicken-and-the-egg situation: it is a bit unfair of me to spring this on people playing vanilla 2/1, where you have a serious problem over a SF 1NT (but not over a F 1NT, you systematically rebid 2
♦ or 2
♣ depending on partnership agreement). However, we play this artificial 2
♣ precisely to ensure we can always show our major without rebid problems.
smerriman, on 2021-November-02, 13:14, said:
Almost. I was saying Gerber would avoid this, and *asking* whether it would have been the right call
One person on BridgeWinners mentioned what additional information the leader would have, but not whether this would cost more long term. I'm guessing it does, but was posing that question here as I wasn't really sure how to quantify it.
Ah, my mistake. I think bidding Gerber is probably slightly better on balance than blasting to 6NT (I said the opposite earlier but changed my mind), if partner is likely to upgrade 14-counts. But personally I think the point is moot since I prefer a different approach altogether.
smerriman, on 2021-November-02, 13:14, said:
Agreed with this. To be honest, I thought all of the lower level bids over 1NT are pretty much set in stone these days other than a few minor variations, so wasn't aware there was a way of going slower. How would you bid these hands (and generally ones missing AK too) in your system?
I think there is a very definite 'expert standard', with a few slight variations. I don't like the standard at all, but good luck convincing people to give up Stayman. However, the followups are a complete mess, and they are different for every partnership (and often not discussed). For what it's worth, I think the standard response structures are (note: the multiple options mean that the partnership has to pick one meaning and stick with it, not that you have multi-way bids):
- 2♣: Stayman. Usually either Garbage (can contain a weak 5-4 majors or weak three-suiter with short clubs), Crawling (same but can also contain weak 4-4 majors) or constructive (always shows at least an invitational hand).
- 2♦: 5(+) hearts. May contain 4 spades if not playing Smolen.
- 2♥: 5(+) spades. May contain 4 hearts if not playing Smolen. May always contain 5 hearts.
- 2♠: Range ask, also used to show a weak hand with clubs.
- 2NT: Four options: 1) transfer to diamonds, 2) puppet stayman, 3) natural NF invitational, 4) GF balanced slam try ('4NT but 2 levels lower'), although this is somewhat of a duplicate of the 2♠ range ask.
- 3♣: Two options: 1) puppet stayman (note: there are about 3-4 different flavours of puppet stayman that see play with different continuations. I play a very simple one but like the Lall version), 2) transfer to diamonds.
- 3♦: - (I don't know of a standard use for this bid. I think people tend to dump the Achilles' heel of their agreement here - something like 5-5 majors, exactly invitational values).
- 3♥: 3=1=(4-5), GF.
- 3♠: 1=3=(4-5), GF.
- 3NT: To play, not descriptive.
- 4-level: Either Gerber and 1-under transfers denying slam interest (Texas transfers), or 2-under transfers showing mild slam interest (South African Texas transfers).
As I said the continuations are a crapshoot. For example, in my regular partnership the direct jump to 3
♦ shows 5-5(+) majors and a GF, the hand with exactly invitational values starts with 2
♣ and rebids 3
♦ if partner responds 2
♦ (there is no problem over a 2M response, and over a 2NT response showing a 6-card minor we are in serious trouble with no way to stop in 3M. That's what you get for opening off-shape 1NT). And 1NT-2
♣; 2
♦-3
♣ is a minor suit ask, GF but not necessarily SI. Also our 2
♣ Stayman ask does not necessarily promise at least 4 cards in a major suit, and the auction 1NT-2
♣; 2
♥-2
♠ shows an invitational hand without a 4cM (by contrast, 2NT shows 4 spades, NF, and higher bids are forcing and natural without promising a major). Nominally this is all just 'stayman and 4-way transfers', but which hands make which bids are highly dependent on the possible followups you have, and what hands partner would have opened 1NT on in the first place.
In my system we would bid:
1
♠-2
♣* (artificial, one of five hand types);
2
♦* (relay, denies a non-minimum shapely hand)-2
♠ (GF with spades);
3
♦ (control, not a lousy minimum)-3
♠ (promises spade ace or king, denies a heart control);
4
♥ (last train, shows a heart control by inference, not enough extras for a Serious 3NT)-4NT (RKC 1430);
5
♣ (1 or 4 keycards)-5
♠ (off two aces);
P.