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How Many NT after 12-14 NT

Poll: How Many NT (35 member(s) have cast votes)

Your Bid

  1. 3N (0 votes [0.00%])

    Percentage of vote: 0.00%

  2. 4N (10 votes [28.57%])

    Percentage of vote: 28.57%

  3. 5N (0 votes [0.00%])

    Percentage of vote: 0.00%

  4. 6N (16 votes [45.71%])

    Percentage of vote: 45.71%

  5. 7N (0 votes [0.00%])

    Percentage of vote: 0.00%

  6. Something Else (9 votes [25.71%])

    Percentage of vote: 25.71%

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#21 User is online   Cyberyeti 

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Posted 2014-June-04, 17:29

 fromageGB, on 2014-June-04, 15:28, said:

Thanks cyber, it's good to hear of ideas that might not be considered as standard, makes you pick on holes in your own methods and try to plug them. I have no MSS after stayman, and while I play strong NT and smolen, I'll suggest we use a 3 rebid for MSS, as this is going spare at the moment for us.

It certainly helps to hear of other takes and ideas around a topic. A saner response than the raw numeric requested, and indeed the poster surely welcomed such a reply by the inclusion of a "something else" category that obviously needs explanation if chosen.


Our system is a little clumsy and probably needs a rework, but we use 1N-2-2-2 and 1N-2-2-3 as MSS, over 2 we have to jump to 3.
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#22 User is offline   Zelandakh 

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Posted 2014-June-04, 18:59

 Cyberyeti, on 2014-June-04, 17:29, said:

Our system is a little clumsy and probably needs a rework, but we use 1N-2-2-2 and 1N-2-2-3 as MSS, over 2 we have to jump to 3.

I used to use 2 over 2/2 and 3 over 2 as Baronesque to find the minor suit fits, which seems better than having to use 3. The trick to make this work was that only the diamond-based hands needed to use Stayman while the club hands used a transfer - 3 suit transfers if you like. I guess you need both 3 and 3 over 2 as natural, which tends to be what causes the minor suit fit-finding to become uncomfortably high.
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#23 User is offline   MrAce 

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Posted 2014-June-05, 01:26

I would bid 6 NT with the lack of agreements.
I also support Cyber and later replies who thinks we should be looking for a possible fit. Pd may even hold a 5 card club and a hand suitable for 6-7 when 6 NT has no play.

I use old school "Aces Scientific" auctions in order to spot minor fits after stayman. (I modified it a little bit for my own convenience). But since it is very risky, I will not share itPosted Image (Joke Eagles Posted Image)
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#24 User is offline   chasetb 

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Posted 2014-June-05, 01:59

Yeah eagles, generally people try to push too many conventions on you, but in a good partnership you need to be able to find those 4-4 minor suit slams. Without too much memory, you can squeeze this hand type in.

As it stands, I am afraid that on many hand, 6NT has no play. I would just invite with 4NT; this is why in my few good partnerships we use 1NT-2-2x-3 as minor-suit Stayman. If you want to sign off in clubs or diamonds, you should just sign off in the first round.
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#25 User is offline   eagles123 

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Posted 2014-June-05, 03:04

Yeah sorry Cyber I see now my comment was a mistake anyway thanks all for the response :)

Eagles
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#26 User is offline   jmcilkley 

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Posted 2014-June-05, 13:04

A difficult question. 4nt should mean bid 6 of you are maximum so would be my choice. Its a lot easier if you play Baron when 2s reply to 1nt asks p to bid 2nt if minimum 12 or lowest 4 card suit if max 14 points. If p bids 3c then I will surely try for 6c and if p bids 3d then 6nt, if he shows min then I stop in 3nt
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#27 User is offline   jmcilkley 

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Posted 2014-June-05, 13:05

A difficult question. 4nt should mean bid 6 of you are maximum so would be my choice. Its a lot easier if you play Baron when 2s reply to 1nt asks p to bid 2nt if minimum 12 or lowest 4 card suit if max 14 points. If p bids 3c then I will surely try for 6c and if p bids 3d then 6nt, if he shows min then I stop in 3nt
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#28 User is offline   jallerton 

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Posted 2014-June-05, 16:42

The best bid clearly depends on your agreements. If you don't have any methods to show this exact hand, you can improvise. After 1NT-2-2, what would 3 mean in your system? If that would not be forcing, how about 4? A very old fashioned method called Sharples, a jump to 4m here shows a 4-card suit with slam interest. Maybe agricultural, but not as agricultural as jumping to 6NT!
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#29 User is offline   kenberg 

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Posted 2014-June-05, 16:44

It occurs to me that 1NT-2-2-3 could be played as a four (or more) card club holding. After that:

Opener bids 3NT to deny four card club support. In this case, knowing partner has diamond length may slow you down a bit for a NT slam. Slowing down might be good..
Opener bids anything other than 3NT to show four card support.

Now suppose responder has five clubs. If opener has four, of course that's great, but suppose over 3 opener bids 3NT. We need not give up on clubs.
Responder, if he wishes to invite slam, bids 4NT. Opener, if he accepts, bids 6 if he has three card support in clubs, and responder passes with five clubs, corrects to 6NT with four.
If, instead, responder still wishes to force a slam after opener bids 3NT over 3, then he bids 5NT pick a slam, and opener, who has denied holding four clubs, bids 6 if he holds three card support.
I don't claim it is perfect but it is fairly natural with 3 showing clubs and a non 3NT response to 3 showing enthusiasm for clubs It is fairly easy to remember, important for an infrequent auction, and apt to handle a fair number of cases. For example, here, if I bid 3 and partner bid 3NT, I think bidding 4NT is enough. We have points, but the hands are not fitting very well.

Lacking agreements, I dunno, I suppose bid the slam. Beats me.
Ken
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#30 User is offline   mikeh 

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Posted 2014-June-06, 14:31

If we are going to be open to other methods, I would suggest that this sort of hand is a reason to play 2 way stayman in response to the opening 1N. By responding 2, as an artificial game forcing response, that doesn't say anything much more than we're going to game and I want to find out about your hand, you are assured of being able to explore for all imaginable fits at a comfortable level. It does help (a lot!) to play transfer responses to the 2 so as to keep the bidding low and, as a side-benefit, to have the stronger hand both on play and having revealed very little information, making the opening lead difficult on many hands.

Since he has denied a major, we would start:

1N 2
2 2

2 denies hearts, may have spades. 2 asks.

Note, if he has spades, we're declaring

We know (from the OP) that he doesn't.

Had he had a 5 card minor, he would have bid, over 2, 2N with clubs (we then bid 3 to set the suit, in a gf auction) or 3 to show diamonds (over which we probably bid 4N quantitative unless feeling very, very pessimistic).

As it is, assume he has no 5 card minor. Over 2 he bids 2N to deny spades and we bid 3

3 shows 3=3=4=3, 3 2=3=4=4, 3 3=2=4=4 and 3N 3=3=3=4.

It is a very effective method.

But back to the OP, since we have to solve this problem with the methods we have agreed to use.

I bid 5N. I won't try the cute 3 since I think it gives a misleading impression of my hand, and while I like involving partner as much or more than most, I don't like implying a longer and likely stronger club suit....he may like his clubs when they are in fact inadequate.

I won't try 4N quantitative even if we have a good method of moving forward (5N as 4=4 minors, for example) because he will too often reject even when slam is good. Unless he is a walter the walrus type he will do more than just add up the 4321 count: he will look at what is likely to be a low number of controls and hideous majors so pass with some working 13 counts.

5N still gives us a small chance of reaching clubs, which is why I choose it over the blind bash of 6N.
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#31 User is offline   the hog 

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Posted 2014-June-06, 14:58

 Trinidad, on 2014-June-03, 12:47, said:

This is uncalled for...

Basically the answer to your question is that it would not occur to me to think of bidding any amount of NT. Just like Cyberyeti, I would search for the club fit. It is quite obvious that it is not really relevant how you and your partner do that. But it should be even more obvious that you do not commit to any number of no trump before you have investigated a club fit. Somewhere between 2 and x NT you should have a bid for that.

Rik


No i is not uncalled for. CY does this on nearly every post and it is boring. Why not just say "after 2C 2D I would look for a C fit"?
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#32 User is online   Cyberyeti 

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Posted 2014-June-06, 15:51

 the hog, on 2014-June-06, 14:58, said:

No i is not uncalled for. CY does this on nearly every post and it is boring. Why not just say "after 2C 2D I would look for a C fit"?


Your criticism, is boring, I did say that

Quote

If I have a means of locating a 4-4 club fit I'll use it here


I then added how we do it but the obvious implication of the way I said it was that there were lots of ways of doing it.
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#33 User is offline   kenberg 

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Posted 2014-June-06, 17:16

I have a question for the OP: Suppose, just suppose, I could bid 3 over 2 and that opener would then bid 3NT lacking four card support and make the most descriptive bid available if he has four (or more) clubs. In that case, I bid 3. What would opener do? If he shows club support we will be playing 6. If he denies club support I will invite slam by raising 3NT to 4. Will this work out?

Added: I phrased the question badly. I meant "If I use 3 that way, will I end up by placing it in 6 or will I be inviting with 4NT?". In short, given that I can find out if partner has four clubs, does he? I see many responders thinking that the answer is "something else", given that there is a way to ask about clubs.
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#34 User is offline   Cascade 

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Posted 2014-June-06, 17:31

 kenrexford, on 2014-June-03, 13:53, said:

Not relevant. Same auction applies if Smolen not available. You just bid 3 instead.


Unless that means something else.
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#35 User is offline   Antrax 

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Posted 2014-June-06, 22:40

 mikeh, on 2014-June-06, 14:31, said:

I bid 5N.
Isn't 5N here a quant bid with 23 HCP or so?
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#36 User is offline   mikeh 

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Posted 2014-June-06, 22:48

 Antrax, on 2014-June-06, 22:40, said:

Isn't 5N here a quant bid with 23 HCP or so?

I would agree if we bid 5N directly, but, and I may be kidding myself, I think after stayman it should be pick a slam. I admit that I am unclear about this, since in my methods after a weak 1N I would never have this problem.
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#37 User is offline   wank 

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Posted 2014-June-07, 05:42

to explain why mikeh is suggesting 2 way stayman over 1NT....

In England almost everyone at the lower end of the ability scale plays a weak NT and as such have no idea what continuations they should play so just default to normal stayman and transfers. In places like America, only a few people at the top end play a weak NT and do so for specific purposes and have put effort into thinking what systemic follow ups to play.

As slam is quite rare opposite a weak NT and the opponents will often have a game on, the American approach is to try and make the responses more pre-emptive. For example, 2/ are weak which means 4th hand only has 1 opportunity to bid, unlike over a transfer where it can pass and protect once 2M is passed out. You can play 3m similarly.

To resolve the stronger hands the common approach is to play 2C as stayman with a limited hand and 2D as an artificial GF, so it's akin to 2-way checkback over a 1NT rebid.
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#38 User is offline   kenberg 

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Posted 2014-June-07, 06:16

 wank, on 2014-June-07, 05:42, said:

to explain why mikeh is suggesting 2 way stayman over 1NT....

In England almost everyone at the lower end of the ability scale plays a weak NT and as such have no idea what continuations they should play so just default to normal stayman and transfers. In places like America, only a few people at the top end play a weak NT and do so for specific purposes and have put effort into thinking what systemic follow ups to play.

As slam is quite rare opposite a weak NT and the opponents will often have a game on, the American approach is to try and make the responses more pre-emptive. For example, 2/ are weak which means 4th hand only has 1 opportunity to bid, unlike over a transfer where it can pass and protect once 2M is passed out. You can play 3m similarly.

To resolve the stronger hands the common approach is to play 2C as stayman with a limited hand and 2D as an artificial GF, so it's akin to 2-way checkback over a 1NT rebid.


This makes a lot of sense, at least to me. Particularly the part about an immediate 2m being to play, cutting down on the opponents' ability to define their hands. I have played weak no trumps only rarely, and not in a well-structured way. This sounds right to me.
Ken
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#39 User is offline   Zelandakh 

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Posted 2014-June-07, 10:35

There are pros and cons Ken. You gain the non-forcing 2M responses but overall lose bidding space. As someone who has played a weak NT my whole life and who has looked into this a fair bit I dislike the 2-way Stayman approach for this reason. I have more sympathy for the 2-under 2m transfer method but that is quite a lot to learn for the average player.

Incidentally, it is not only America that uses 2-way Stayman. Around these parts it is the most common structure over a weak NT too.
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#40 User is offline   mikeh 

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Posted 2014-June-07, 17:29

 Zelandakh, on 2014-June-07, 10:35, said:

There are pros and cons Ken. You gain the non-forcing 2M responses but overall lose bidding space. As someone who has played a weak NT my whole life and who has looked into this a fair bit I dislike the 2-way Stayman approach for this reason. I have more sympathy for the 2-under 2m transfer method but that is quite a lot to learn for the average player.

Incidentally, it is not only America that uses 2-way Stayman. Around these parts it is the most common structure over a weak NT too.

I truly don't think that is correct, Zel. It is if one uses basic 2 way but the method I use enhances bidding space while often making the undescribed hand declarer in high level contracts. I have touched on it earlier, but the responses to 2 are:

2: denies hearts or a 5 card minor. 2 now asks, over which:

2N denies spades, 3 asks exact shape
3 shows 4 diamonds and 4 spades
3 shows clubs and spades
3 shows 5
3 can either 'does not exist' or shows a max 4=3=3=3, whichever you like
3N shows either all 4=3=3=3 hands or, if you use 3 as a max, it shows a minimum 4=3=3=3

2: shows 4+ hearts, denies spades. 2n asks for minor (again, bid the other one) and you can use 3M/3N to show either 3=4=3=3 ranges or 5 hearts

2N: shows 5+ clubs

3: shows 5+ diamonds

3: shows 4=4 majors.

Note that responder can always set trump below game anytime he finds a fit and usually below 3N, and in doing so makes a slam try while usually becoming declarer without ever really saying much about his hand, other than cuebidding.

Responder can always break the relay and bid his own suit over opener's response.

I've shown this to several expert weak 1N bidders and everyone who has tried it, adopts it (so far).
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