Opening at the 4 level looking to improve our methods
#1
Posted 2015-April-05, 06:42
4C shows a hand with a long semi-solid Major with 3.5-4 Honor tricks OR a Minor suit with 2.5 -3 Honor tricks; no void
4D says to go ahead and bid your suit
4H is a slam try
4S is a slam try
5C is to Play
6C shows first round control in 3 suits
5D is to Play
6D shows first round control in 3 suits
4D shows a hand with a long strong Major with 2.5-3 Honor tricks
4H shows no slam interest
Pass
4S is a correction to Spades
4S shows slam interest in Hearts
4NT is BETA (Control Asking)
5C is a cue bid
5D is a cue bid
4H is natural and weak
4S is natural and weak
4NT shows long Clubs or Diamonds, strong, with at least one void
5C shows no slam interest
Pass
5D is a correction to Diamonds
As an aside, I don't think I want to use all the 4 level opening suit bids to strictly show Majors, although I have thought that maybe opening 3NT could show a Minor ( Our 3NT opening currently is undefined), which would then take care of that concern.
I also need to be GCC compliant
Thank you in advance for any suggestions.
#4
Posted 2015-April-05, 07:27
4N opening also non-GCC, cant be used for an unnamed minor, which is really dumb since 3N can. 4N could be used for both minors.
#5
Posted 2015-April-05, 07:43
1) 3N - long minor, 4♣-good ♥, 4♦- good ♠, higher natural
2) 3N - solid major, 4-bids natural (or 2 under transfers which would commit to 5-level for minor suit pre-empts)
#6
Posted 2015-April-05, 16:05
#7
Posted 2015-April-06, 08:49
jallerton, on 2015-April-05, 16:05, said:
Wouldn't Opening 3NT have the same affect (presuming 3NT is showing a long suit) in either of Steve2005's options ? So I am leaning toward Option A, if those are my only choices (vs. what I do now when I open or overcall 4 of a suit).
#8
Posted 2015-April-06, 09:36
3NT = 8-9 tricks in a 7+card major, asking for tricks/controls
4m = natural
4M = natural, fairly wide range but weaker than 3NT
Basically the 3NT hands are ones that have the trick-taking power to open a strong club (or perhaps a strong 2♣) but typically only 12-15 hcp. An example would be ♠AQJxxxx ♥AKx ♦xx ♣x. Responses to 3NT are:
4♣ = 3+ tricks possible
4♦ = less than 3 tricks, wants opener to declare
4M = less than 3 tricks, I want to declare (pass/correct, usually responder can guess the major)
3NT-4♣:
... 4♦ = hearts
... 4♥ = spades
Responder now accepts opener's transfer with 3 tricks only. Otherwise responder can cue or keycard. If responder accepts the transfer, opener can bid on with better than a minimum.
Where this fits on the spectrum of ACBL legality is unclear. Most people we mention this to have the immediate reaction of "it's mid-chart" but this actually cannot be the right answer. If you buy that this shows a strong hand and asks for tricks/controls, then it fits under the general chart. If you don't buy that and think it's more of a multi-suit preempt, it's super-chart. In practice we play mostly in mid-chart events and haven't gotten any complaints about this opening. It may be worth noting that you sometimes see people open a strong 2♣ with these hands (typically weaker players) and this has been deemed allowed by ACBL.
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#9
Posted 2015-April-07, 06:50
#10
Posted 2015-April-07, 09:11
I also think that 4M as natural and somewhat wide ranging gains a lot more than it loses.
On the other hand, gambling 3nt isn't much good. Much more useful is something like 5S & 6H, 8-12 or a narrowly defined constructive major preempt.
#11
Posted 2015-April-07, 09:12
I also think that 4M as natural and somewhat wide ranging gains a lot more than it loses.
On the other hand, gambling 3nt isn't much good. Much more useful is something like 5S & 6H, 8-12 or a narrowly defined constructive major preempt.
#12
Posted 2015-April-07, 11:15
WesleyC, on 2015-April-07, 09:12, said:
Yes, I like this and I play it myself, but I think it is not legal on GCC.
#13
Posted 2015-April-07, 12:39
awm, on 2015-April-06, 09:36, said:
3NT = 8-9 tricks in a 7+card major, asking for tricks/controls
Sensible, but not GCC legal. 3N can be unnamed minor or any solid suit. So if you want unnamed major you need it to be solid. This is silly but true minors can be anything but majors need to be solid.
I also agree with others that playing 4♣/4♦ as natural is very underrated.
#14
Posted 2015-April-07, 14:10
steve2005, on 2015-April-07, 12:39, said:
I also agree with others that playing 4♣/4♦ as natural is very underrated.
The GCC also allows calls which ask for aces, kings, controls, etc (and presumably show strong hands). This would seem to qualify, just as 3nt asking specific aces is allowed.
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#15
Posted 2015-April-07, 15:30
Shugart23, on 2015-April-06, 08:49, said:
No. If you open 3NT on hands with a long minor, then it gives 2nd hand (and sometimes 4th hand as well) 'two bites at the cherry'. The opponents have a bigger range of calls available so the artificial pre-empt is less effective. For example, if RHO opens 4♣ natural, I only have one way to bid 4♥. If RHO opens 3NT showing a pre-empt in a minor, I can overcall 4♥ immediately, or I can double then bid 4♥ on the next round, or I can pass then bid 4♥ on the next round (assuming there is one). Similarly, I can assign different meanings to double 3NT then double 4m, double 3NT then pass over 4m, and pass over 3NT then double a correction to 4m.
#16
Posted 2015-April-07, 15:44
awm, on 2015-April-07, 14:10, said:
yes there is the ask for A/K loophole but it is a very rare hand that this kind of information is all you need for an opening. Even more unlikely you can't find this out eventually opening a strong 1♣ or 2♣. The only use I see for this type of opening bid which doesn't use up a much more useful bid would be 4N asking for specific aces.So not useful as an opening, yes useful for later A/K asks.
#17
Posted 2015-April-07, 15:54
#18
Posted 2015-April-07, 16:13
Shugart23, on 2015-April-07, 15:54, said:
??? I believe that a solid suit is AKQJxx or AKQxxxx. I maybe wrong about whether you need the 10 for 6 solid or the J for seven solid. With eight cards, I am pretty sure AKQ is enough.
#19
Posted 2015-April-07, 16:32
Vampyr, on 2015-April-07, 16:13, said:
I think I'd rather have 8 spades to the AQ vs AKQJXX....not disagreeing with your definition...be nice to see official ACBL def
#20
Posted 2015-April-07, 16:38
Vampyr, on 2015-April-07, 16:13, said:
I don't believe the ACBL has an official definition (the "I know it when I see it" test). The Official Encyclopedia of Bridge, by the ACBL, does not have status of regulation, but does have a definition: a suit which can be expected to lose no tricks opposite a stiff in partner's hand and might not lose any tricks opposite a void. The Encyclopedia does not define how much better than 50% probability constitutes "expected", but it is surely more than 51% and less than 100%. ACBL is deliciously vague. (Not so delicious when you have to play under their regs.)