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It finally happened....

#1 User is offline   jtfanclub 

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Posted 2007-May-29, 22:02

I opened a club, 'could be short' with exactly 4432.

Partner, who's a decent intermediate player with a lot of experience with Standard American, responded 1 spade with...

95432
9862
654
3

I give. Why is it that SA players, who never seem to pass 1 club anyways, won't play 1 diamond as a waiting bid? Is it a complexity issue? Style? That it's associated with evil Precision?

It's just not that complicated, and if you open 1 with all non-reverse strength hands with 4+ diamonds (which they all seem to), what's the point in showing diamonds anyways?

I suppose the question also applies to 2/1. Why no waiting 1 bid there either?
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#2 User is offline   han 

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Posted 2007-May-29, 22:12

What exactly is the point of this thread? Is it a plea for using 1C-1D as artificial after a natural (but short) 1C opening? Are you writing this to vent your frustration with players who respond very light when they have a 5-card major? Or is it to celebrate your victory of getting to the 9-card fit after you opened in your 3-card fit and they won't compete over 2S? It isn't clear to me.
Please note: I am interested in boring, bog standard, 2/1.

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#3 User is offline   helene_t 

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Posted 2007-May-30, 01:15

My personal opinion is that it's for the same reason as why I'm typing this comment with a QWERTY keyboard. Few people even know that artificial responses to 1 exist, still fewer know what their advantages and disadvantages are and what specific agreements you need to make to avoid misunderstandings. Even those who have sufficiently knowledge don't bother to play artifical responses, because
- You never know if some BBO TD might think that the conventions violates his idiosyncratic rules.
- You'll have to understand standard bidding anyway because everybody plays it, and you will still have to play standard with most of your semi-regular partners. So you're better of investing your time perfecting your standard bidding.
- There are many conventions that I should probably learn and might find time to study one day. No reason to assume that the 1 negative is in top 10.

FWIW, I don't like the 1 negative, I think T-Walsh offers more value for less complexity. But that's just me. Of course this is comparing apples to oranges since the problems addressed by the two conventions barely overlap.
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#4 User is offline   cherdano 

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Posted 2007-May-30, 01:25

jtfanclub, on May 29 2007, 10:02 PM, said:

I opened a club, 'could be short' with exactly 4432.

Partner, who's a decent intermediate player with a lot of experience with Standard American, responded 1 spade with...

95432
9862
654
3

I give. Why is it that SA players, who never seem to pass 1 club anyways, won't play 1 diamond as a waiting bid? Is it a complexity issue? Style? That it's associated with evil Precision?

It's just not that complicated, and if you open 1 with all non-reverse strength hands with 4+ diamonds (which they all seem to), what's the point in showing diamonds anyways?

If I had to bid 1 waiting, or 1 0-8, or 1-not-a-4-card-major-with-8+-points with this I would rather pass. The point of bidding 1 rather than passing is to show my shape, quickly, and make it tough for opponents to enter the auction.
The same principle might explain why it is useful to have a bid to show, uhm, diamonds...
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#5 User is offline   whereagles 

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Posted 2007-May-30, 01:45

jtf: this is one of the reasons the sayc 2 opener is obsolete. If you're never going to pass 1, you might as well dump the 2 opener into it and free the bid to something more interesting, e.g. a WEAK TWO ;)
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#6 User is offline   paulg 

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Posted 2007-May-30, 01:50

I'm a big anti-fan of 1 "waiting" in such a system, but I do see a lot of beginners and intermediates panic bid in such cases of short clubs. A gentle friendly word about the real risks normally sorts them out.

Of course, if your partner does it again (following the friendly chat), then he is essentially playing 1 as forcing and it should be alerted as such.

Paul
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#7 User is offline   ochinko 

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Posted 2007-May-30, 01:57

If I pull that 1 with any of my partners, we'll end up playing 1NT with nine spades and eight hearts in the line, because I have denied having a four card major.

It's just a matter of style and agreements whether you could afford to bid the other minor here.
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#8 User is offline   Gerben42 

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Posted 2007-May-30, 03:12

Does he do that only with the short or also with other 1-bids? If so he is basically playing Fantunes without using the solutions to the problems he is creating :huh:
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#9 User is offline   navit 

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Posted 2007-May-30, 04:18

I learned that 1 D response to partner's 1 C opening bid means less than 6 points.
Any comments please
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#10 User is offline   paulg 

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Posted 2007-May-30, 04:36

navit, on May 30 2007, 11:18 AM, said:

I learned that 1 D response to partner's 1 C opening bid means less than 6 points.
Any comments please

Generally a 1 response to 1 shows diamonds and at least, say, 5+ HCP. Hands with fewer points pass.

Using 1 as a negative response is playable but non-standard.

Paul
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#11 User is offline   david_c 

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Posted 2007-May-30, 04:57

jtfanclub, on May 30 2007, 05:02 AM, said:

I give.  Why is it that SA players, who never seem to pass 1 club anyways, won't play 1 diamond as a waiting bid?  Is it a complexity issue?  Style?  That it's associated with evil Precision? 

No, it's because a 1 waiting bid is not part of SA. If you've agreed to play SA, then 1 is not an option. :blink:

Maybe your partner would have been happy to play 1 as a waiting bid, but that requires discussion.

Also, you might find more like-minded partners if you write "WJ" in your profile.
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#12 User is offline   kenberg 

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Posted 2007-May-30, 07:10

One of the things I have never understood is why players want to open a 4-4-3-2 hand with 1C. It causes problems and solves little. But I realize that's not your question.

Actually your question seems to presuppose I would not pass 1C. I would. Several reasons:

No one has doubled yet. Given my hand, that's a blessing.

My partner might have clubs. Six of them, say.

Fourth hand might bid, after which any action I take will be much clearer in light of my original pass.

If I do anything other than pass, partner is likely to think I have something. This is likely to be bad.

If I bid with this trash, partner will remember it next time and not trust my bidding.

If someone puts a gun to my head and says I must bid, I bid spades of course. But only if the gun is loaded.

PS If I play transfer Walsh responses, assuming that means what I think it does (I have never played them) I guess I might do that. Have to discuss it first.
Ken
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#13 User is offline   foo 

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Posted 2007-May-30, 07:44

jtfanclub, on May 29 2007, 11:02 PM, said:

I opened a club, 'could be short' with exactly 4432.

Partner, who's a decent intermediate player with a lot of experience with Standard American, responded 1S with...

9543298626543

I give.  Why is it that SA players, who never seem to pass 1C anyways, won't play 1D as a waiting bid?  Is it a complexity issue?  Style?  That it's associated with evil Precision? 

It's just not that complicated, and if you open 1 with all non-reverse strength hands with 4+ diamonds (which they all seem to), what's the point in showing diamonds anyways?

I suppose the question also applies to 2/1.  Why no waiting 1 bid there either?

The "short club" in SA or 2/1 causes more problems than it solves unless you play a fairly sophisticated structure based on it.

I have =once= while using SA or 2/1 opened 1C with =4432. My D's were xxx and my C's were AK.

I =do= play 1C-1D as a waiting sequence, but that's because I play 1N= 12-14 and therefore want to reduce the risk of wrongsiding NT contracts after GOP opens 1m.
since for me 1C-1N= 9-11, 1C-1D! is where 6-8 counts w/o a 4cM go.
~99% of the time the 1D responder has D's. Thus it is more or less a natural bid.

But the =real= problem here is that Responder should never take a bid on the example garbage unless you are playing methods to field it.

Responder probably felt (correctly) that if 1C could be short, they had to "rescue" Opener and try to "improve the contract". This is an example of one of the hidden costs of playing the "short club".
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#14 User is offline   helene_t 

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Posted 2007-May-30, 08:00

Short club deviates from SA only with respect to the specific 4=4=3=2 pattern. Don't worry about it. If you want to be able to respond to with zero HCP you should choose that because:
- Even if you assume opener has at least 3 and probably 4 clubs, passing with a singleton is a gamble.
- You don't want LHO to be able to balance at the 1-level, and you don't want him to know that it's safe to bid because you have nothing
- You want to cater for the possibility that opener has a monster hand which didn't qualify for a strong 2-bid, say 4315.

Of course if you play 1 as forcing you could open with a singleton as well (so that 1 promises 5) and you could put a number of ultra-strong hands into 1. I doubt that's a good idea, though. I'm already uncomfortable with the SA minor suit openings which mean too many different things. In fact I've persuaded both of my IRL partners to play systems with more informative minor suit openings. Putting even more possibilities into the 1 makes it even more vulnerable to preemption.

As others have suggested, playing WJ may be the way to go for you. An alternative is to play the Mexican 2 opening. Then you know that when you play 1 in a 3-2 fit (or worse) at least the board belongs to the opps.
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#15 User is offline   jtfanclub 

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Posted 2007-May-30, 08:13

Hannie, on May 29 2007, 11:12 PM, said:

What exactly is the point of this thread? Is it a plea for using 1C-1D as artificial after a natural (but short) 1C opening? Are you writing this to vent your frustration with players who respond very light when they have a 5-card major? Or is it to celebrate your victory of getting to the 9-card fit after you opened in your 3-card fit and they won't compete over 2S? It isn't clear to me.

Well, it's certainly not the last one...I had Axxx AJx x AK9xx. I'd rather have played it in 1 club than 3 spades.

Really, it's none of the above. It's my frustration with SAYC. If everybody on the planet responds to 1 very light (probably not THIS light, but you know what I mean) then the system should reflect it, either with a nebulous 1 diamond response or through something else. SAYC just seems like a huge house of smoke and mirrors to me...partner opens his better minor, which will be at least 4 cards, except when it isn't his better minor and/or it isn't at least 4 cards. You respond with 6+ hcp except when you respond with 0, etc. etc.

It seems like SAYC is a system now built around lying. You try to guess ahead of time what your partner is going to say next, and then you make the call that will get you to the right place if your partner is being honest. You learn the rules not so that you'll obey them, but so you'll know what partner means so you can trick him into doing the right thing.

I know, it's just my frustration with trying to learn SAYC...25 years now of working on it, and I'm still not very good at it. But if I hear or read one more time "I did this because if I did the book thing I wouldn't have a convenient rebid"...come on, say what you mean. You lied to your partner because you thought dishonesty would get you to a better result, and I don't mean fudging a jack or even a queen.

I have enough frustration with "overhangs"...partner opens 1 diamond, you have 5 spades and 4 hearts, or 5 clubs and 4 spades. Do you go "up the line" or bid your longest first? Well, from reading here, it seems you bid the longest first, unless you think that'll be inconvenient later. Then you bid up the line. Whichever one you do, you'll surely be able to browbeat partner by saying that it's standard, and surely he should have known what you have.

Maybe this works for everybody else. It's certainly popular. But Good Lord, is this really the system we want to teach beginners? Can't we have a Green Card where everybody agrees that this bid means X or sometimes Y, and not "partner wants you to think he has X, and you'll find out what he actually has when he puts down the dummy"?

Sorry for venting. I'll be good now.
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Posted 2007-May-30, 08:19

jtfanclub, on May 30 2007, 09:13 AM, said:

Well, it's certainly not the last one...I had Axxx AJx x AK9xx. I'd rather have played it in 1 club than 3 spades.

Why? 3S is a better spot. Your partner's gamble paid off.


Quote

But Good Lord, is this really the system we want to teach beginners?


I don't think anyone would teach a beginner to respond with this hand.
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#17 User is offline   jtfanclub 

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Posted 2007-May-30, 08:25

Jlall, on May 30 2007, 09:19 AM, said:

Quote

But Good Lord, is this really the system we want to teach beginners?


I don't think anyone would teach a beginner to respond with this hand.

It's not the beginner who makes this call. It's beginner's partner. Or it's beginner's opponents playing the 'same system', who get to 3, get a good result, and the beginner is trying to figure out what the heck happened. Or worst of all, the beginner passes, gets a bad result, and either gets chastised by his partner for making the book bid, or sees the bad result and can't figure out what the heck he did wrong.

I dunno. It's bad enough for me, and I'm only a beginner compared to people like you. :)
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#18 User is offline   helene_t 

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Posted 2007-May-30, 08:38

jtfanclub, on May 30 2007, 04:13 PM, said:

[.....]SAYC just seems like a huge house of smoke and mirrors to me...partner opens his better minor, which will be at least 4 cards, except when it isn't his better minor and/or it isn't at least 4 cards. You respond with 6+ hcp except when you respond with 0, etc. etc. [....]
But Good Lord, is this really the system we want to teach beginners?

I don't think SAYC is that bad for beginners. OK, most other systems are better but then again, SAYC is what potential partners play and most books for beginners and intermediates assume some SAYC-like system.

Of course you must teach beginners to bid with dicipline. They must know the rules before they can make the decision to deviate from them once in a while. This means passing 1m with less than 6 HCP.

If your beginning students can't swallow that because they are phobic of the 3-1 fit, you might consider a different system. But I think you'll get similar problems with any system. Someone should write a book about all the bad habbits beginners aquire again and again, with enough examples, statistics and logical arguments to convince at least the brighter students that it's usually not a good idea
- to overstate your values when rescuing partner from a part-score that hasn't been doubled and might not even be bad
- to overstate your values and/or suit length in order to avoid a notrump bid just because there might be an open suit and opps might lead it and partner might not take out your notrump bid.
- to repeat a 5-card (non-forcingly) because you have only promised 4 and partner might have 3-card support (but might also have zero)
- to lead a naked ace just to have a look at the dummy (or because you want to cash it before it's too late)

Of course if you can't swallow it yourself, you must teach some other system. I think it's important for a teacher to believe in what you're teaching.
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#19 User is offline   bid_em_up 

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Posted 2007-May-30, 08:39

foo, on May 30 2007, 08:44 AM, said:

The "short club" in SA or 2/1 causes more problems than it solves unless you play a fairly sophisticated structure based on it.
.........
This is an example of one of the hidden costs of playing the "short club".

kenberg, on May 30 2007, 08:10 AM, said:

One of the things I have never understood is why players want to open a 4-4-3-2 hand with 1C. It causes problems and solves little.

Statements like these are usually based on a lack of appreciation for subsequent changes to other auctions and the inferences implied. They are totally false, and are strictly the opinions of the posters quoted. I used to feel the same way as they do until a player much better than myself showed me why I was mistaken. There is no additional "sophisticated" structure required.

Problems like the original one are nothing more than an indication of the lack of discipline on responders part to pass 1C. There is absolutely no reason to respond on garbage such as this. This is a direct result of partner being an "beginner/intermediate" player who thinks he must "rescue" his partner, and has no bearing on the 1C opening itself. In most cases, they simply do not have the experience/discipline required to pass and risk partner playing a 2-1 fit, all the while knowing that if 1C gets doubled for penalty back to them they can run then. And they also don't appreciate is that by holding a stiff, it actually reduces that likelihood that partner only holds a 2 card suit.

Your issue really shouldn't be with the system. Your issue is with your partner who cannot follow the system and pass as he is supposed to.
Is the word "pass" not in your vocabulary?
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#20 User is offline   jtfanclub 

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Posted 2007-May-30, 08:46

helene_t, on May 30 2007, 09:38 AM, said:

Someone should write a book about all the bad habbits beginners aquire again and again, with enough examples, statistics and logical arguments to convince at least the brighter students that it's usually not a good idea...

I think that's a wonderful idea. Anybody know if such a book exists?
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