email hand 2015-1
#2
Posted 2015-January-02, 14:28
My regular partner and I have a method for handling this. First of all, we use "continuous no-trump ranges." When vulnerable, or if partner is a nonvul passed hand, 1NT is a good 14-17, 2NT is 18-20, and bigger NT hands are opened 2♣. With a minimum opening bid up to a reasonable 14 count, we open one of a suit and rebid 1NT. In first and second seat nonvul, we play a 10-13 1NT opening. So, one of a suit followed by a 1NT rebid shows 14-17, and an opening 2NT bid shows 18-20. There is no gap between a 1NT opening (or rebid, if opener is in 1st or 2nd seat nonvul) and a 2NT opening. Hence the term "continuous no-trump ranges."
Now, what does this have to do with the hand in the OP? This approach frees up the 2NT rebid for hands with about 15 -18 HCP, 6 cards in the suit opened and 3 card support for responder's suit. So, after opening 1♦ and hearing a 1♥ response, opener bids 2NT to show this hand.
#3
Posted 2015-January-02, 14:50
ArtK78, on 2015-January-02, 14:28, said:
My regular partner and I have a method for handling this. First of all, we use "continuous no-trump ranges." When vulnerable, or if partner is a nonvul passed hand, 1NT is a good 14-17, 2NT is 18-20, and bigger NT hands are opened 2♣. With a minimum opening bid up to a reasonable 14 count, we open one of a suit and rebid 1NT. In first and second seat nonvul, we play a 10-13 1NT opening. So, one of a suit followed by a 1NT rebid shows 14-17, and an opening 2NT bid shows 18-20. There is no gap between a 1NT opening (or rebid, if opener is in 1st or 2nd seat nonvul) and a 2NT opening. Hence the term "continuous no-trump ranges."
Now, what does this have to do with the hand in the OP? This approach frees up the 2NT rebid for hands with about 15 -18 HCP, 6 cards in the suit opened and 3 card support for responder's suit. So, after opening 1♦ and hearing a 1♥ response, opener bids 2NT to show this hand.
Thanks Art. I know I posted this in the natural bidding section on purpose but someone just sent me this on transfer rebids which I don't recall hearing before but I found to be an interesting idea:
"It works even better to play that 1D opening shows an unbalanced hand so you can play transfer rebids: 1D-1H-2C= 6+ D, then bid 2H to show 3-6 with some extras (1D-1H-2D is a 3-card raise with a minimum and 5+ D).
Of course opening 1C with all balanced hands (except with 3-3-5-2 can open 1D) creates its own headaches in competitive auctions."
#4
Posted 2015-January-02, 15:01
ArtK78, on 2015-January-02, 14:28, said:
My regular partner and I have a method for handling this. First of all, we use "continuous no-trump ranges." When vulnerable, or if partner is a nonvul passed hand, 1NT is a good 14-17, 2NT is 18-20, and bigger NT hands are opened 2♣. With a minimum opening bid up to a reasonable 14 count, we open one of a suit and rebid 1NT. In first and second seat nonvul, we play a 10-13 1NT opening. So, one of a suit followed by a 1NT rebid shows 14-17, and an opening 2NT bid shows 18-20. There is no gap between a 1NT opening (or rebid, if opener is in 1st or 2nd seat nonvul) and a 2NT opening. Hence the term "continuous no-trump ranges."
Now, what does this have to do with the hand in the OP? This approach frees up the 2NT rebid for hands with about 15 -18 HCP, 6 cards in the suit opened and 3 card support for responder's suit. So, after opening 1♦ and hearing a 1♥ response, opener bids 2NT to show this hand.
Again straying from natural bidding playing Mexican 2d(17-19) bal. offshape ok...then:
3=1=6=3 can rebid 2nt and rebid 3d with 3 card major suit support, ex 1=3=6=3
#5
Posted 2015-January-02, 15:28
absent add. agreements - 3D.
With kind regards
Marlowe
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#7
Posted 2015-January-02, 21:37
whereagles, on 2015-January-02, 16:33, said:
Of course it is. And responder; with 5 reasonable hearts, a singleton diamond, and a 7 count, passes. So you go down in 3♦ instead of making a heart game.
This type of hand appears over and over again in Master Solvers Club.
#8
Posted 2015-January-03, 06:01
If you wanna try a "Fix", you'll break other stuff:
1♦ 1♥
??
2♦? this risks an even easier pass out.
3♥? this works well if pard has 5 hearts, but may be a disaster if he has 4 weakish ones.
2♠? can work, but pard may have a 4-4 majors, after which there's no telling what can happen.
2NT? way too off shape.
Really, 3♦, while not ideal in some scenarios, seems to be the percentage bid. There's a reason for it being textbook.
#9
Posted 2015-January-03, 12:51
#10
Posted 2015-January-04, 04:58
There are plenty of special methods, we use a 2S rebid as multi-way including 3-6 in the reds invitational as one of the options.
#11
Posted 2015-January-04, 13:10
#12
Posted 2015-January-04, 15:37
For what its worth, partners hand was:
Txxx
KJxx
xx
Kxx