The 2NT Truscott convention (by Alan Truscott)
#1
Posted 2023-October-01, 03:23
#2
Posted 2023-October-01, 03:27
#3
Posted 2023-October-01, 03:34
As can be seen by also using the previous post relating to the double bid, there are various bidding alternatives in the context of contested auction, on openings of 1♥ or 1♠, which is certainly not negligible.
#4
Posted 2023-October-01, 09:04
Lovera, on 2023-October-01, 03:34, said:
As can be seen by also using the previous post relating to the double bid, there are various bidding alternatives in the context of contested action, on openings of 1♥ or 1♠, which is certainly not negligible.
For unknown reasons, the convention was (and maybe still is) known as Jordan in America, assumed to be named after Robert Jordan. In the early 70s, The Bridge World wrote "Bobby denies any knowledge. Maybe it was named after the river."
#5
Posted 2023-October-01, 11:05
bluenikki, on 2023-October-01, 09:04, said:
Infact i think so. As we could see later is known how (Aka Jordan).
#6
Posted 2023-October-01, 15:06
The two sources in #2 and #3 show that this convention can be used in contested auctions in various ways. However, I point to another well-known site where you can see the bidding development in a more extensive way:
https://www.pattayab...uscott_main.htm
You have to see, before of Inverted Jordan ... , the link "when RHO has doubled" too.
#7
Posted 2023-October-02, 08:11
#8
Posted 2023-October-02, 10:41
Oddly enough, while I don't hear it called "Dormer" often (used to, yet another person who thought it was a good idea), the "Over 1M-X, 2NT is LR+, over 1m-X, 2NT is preemptive minor, 3m is LR", if it has a name attached (rather than just "flip-flop"), is consistently "Flip-Flop Dormer" in my circles.
All of this (and Cappelletti/Hamilton/Pottage, and...) is the bright flashing argument for "name of convention is not adequate disclosure".
(as I am back in D16 these days, I am reminded that the other argument is the inevitable "was 3♠ West Coast?" To which my response is "No idea, never could figure out what West Coast vs East Coast cuebids were; 3♠ asked for a (full) spade stopper." Similar for "inverted minor", "Bergen" and "Jacoby [2NT]", to post some examples just off the top of my head...)
#9
Posted 2023-October-02, 14:58
mycroft, on 2023-October-02, 10:41, said:
Oddly enough, while I don't hear it called "Dormer" often (used to, yet another person who thought it was a good idea), the "Over 1M-X, 2NT is LR+, over 1m-X, 2NT is preemptive minor, 3m is LR", if it has a name attached (rather than just "flip-flop"), is consistently "Flip-Flop Dormer" in my circles.
All of this (and Cappelletti/Hamilton/Pottage, and...) is the bright flashing argument for "name of convention is not adequate disclosure".
Although on a system card with limited space, the name of a convention (say "Unusual over Unusual") *can* be appropriate disclosure, so long as there are system notes to flesh it out.
And then there is the opposite problem, conventions that for some reason have no name (at least locally) and are assumed to be normal if not natural. Around here that includes 2NT as LR over 1M ("Jacoby what?"), with *or without* interference... and if most people already play that way without interference, it's even harder for them to grasp that others may play it only after double and give it a fancy name to boot.
Whereas it never even struck them that it could be played over 1m too, although I'm not sure that is a great loss: 1m (p) 2N is a descriptive natural auction and 1m (X) tends to say something fairly specific about RHO's majors, at least around here. If you are going to play it, I guess inverting makes sense, to rightside 3N: I don't see the argument about not being able to use it with more than LR, you can always play that 4m (or 4om) is GF of some kind.
#10
Posted 2023-October-02, 18:36
#12
Posted 2023-October-03, 07:26
#15
Posted 2023-October-04, 09:56
#16
Posted 2023-October-05, 08:42
#17
Posted 2023-October-05, 09:25
mycroft, on 2023-October-02, 10:41, said:
Oddly enough, while I don't hear it called "Dormer" often (used to, yet another person who thought it was a good idea), the "Over 1M-X, 2NT is LR+, over 1m-X, 2NT is preemptive minor, 3m is LR", if it has a name attached (rather than just "flip-flop"), is consistently "Flip-Flop Dormer" in my circles.
All of this (and Cappelletti/Hamilton/Pottage, and...) is the bright flashing argument for "name of convention is not adequate disclosure".
(as I am back in D16 these days, I am reminded that the other argument is the inevitable "was 3♠ West Coast?" To which my response is "No idea, never could figure out what West Coast vs East Coast cuebids were; 3♠ asked for a (full) spade stopper." Similar for "inverted minor", "Bergen" and "Jacoby [2NT]", to post some examples just off the top of my head...)
Perhaps this one can help you:http://www.infobridg...ni_Truscott.htm
#18
Posted 2023-October-05, 14:49
Lovera, on 2023-October-05, 09:25, said:
I somehow doubt he was confused in the first place
But it's an interesting link (assuming translation to English/Spanish/Mycroft) for the proposed interventions over strong 1♣.
I would be pained to give up our current 1NT = 4M+5m, but it does seem reasonable that the 1 level identifies various 5-5.
#19
Posted 2023-October-08, 04:00
#20
Posted 2023-October-08, 11:51
Pescetom is not quite right. I 100% am not sure which is which. It's just that I don't care. "The name of the convention is not full disclosure". I know how I play it; I discuss what we're playing with partner if we aren't on the same page; and if it matters, and the opponents use the convention name, I know to ask what it actually means. It's not that I couldn't find out if I wanted to. It's just that it literally does not matter to me - which was my point :-).
My issue with this entire topic (besides not understanding what you are trying to do. A clear topic statement at the beginning would have helped. Your explanation of what you were intending (to pescetom) still did not make sense to me. Are you detailing "Truscott as invented by Truscott"? "Differences between how it's played now and how it was designed 40 years ago"? "What is and is not Truscott - if you don't play it this way, don't call it that"? "...here's why this way is better"? "What GIB calls Truscott isn't Truscott, and here's why that's a problem"? "Here's what GIB actually plays, so you know how to handle it"?) is that nothing is played the way it was when it was invented. Frequently, the person who invented it did it suboptimally, and "everybody" plays it the clearer or more optimal way, even the inventor.
So, depending on what your point actually is, my comment might be explaining that others are playing Dormer not Truscott, and that's not "wrong", even if they call it Truscott; they might be playing Jordan (even if it's actually Truscott, or if it's what they think is Truscott, but isn't really); it might be showing why "explain what you play, it doesn't matter what it's called", or many other things. And it might be a totally unnecessary complication and poor thread drift. Like this one. If so, sorry; put it down to lack of understanding.