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how do you bid this hand ?

#1 User is offline   shugart24 

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Posted Yesterday, 09:25

Partner opens 1C (precision) : AQ, AQJ5, A9842, J7. I respond 1D: 953, 876, K75, A10 9 6 Partner bids 2D and I bid 3D all pass. Would it make sense if bidding goes 1C-1D-2m that advancer shows a stop with 5-7 or would that create other difficulties - e.g missing an 8 card Major fit
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#2 User is offline   steve2005 

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Posted Yesterday, 09:30

I give a positive response with an Ace and a King
so would respond 1N (or whatever response you have if playing transfers) and end up in 3N good or bad
Sarcasm is a state of mind
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#3 User is offline   steve2005 

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Posted Yesterday, 09:35

If it goes 1-1 i would rebid 1NT
or 1 with a possible 4H 5+ minor that way all your minor bids 2/2/3/3 deny a 4-card major
Sarcasm is a state of mind
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#4 User is offline   shugart24 

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Posted Yesterday, 09:43

View Poststeve2005, on 2025-February-21, 09:30, said:

I give a positive response with an Ace and a King
so would respond 1N (or whatever response you have if playing transfers) and end up in 3N good or bad


fair enough (we jump to 2S to show balanced 8-11 : 1C-2S)...so change the King to a Queen removing the 1NT response...(how many points is your 1c opening?)
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#5 User is offline   DavidKok 

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Posted Yesterday, 10:24

My strong club is 16+ unbalanced or 17+ balanced, though upgrades (and downgrades, notably with 4441-distribution) are permitted.

Over 1-1 I like a particular variant of the Cambridge Heart Complex, or a more intuitive option, Meckwell Lite. Both systems are MAFIA: opener's 1M rebids are (primarily) unbalanced with 4(+)M and possibly a longer minor suit. This way the 2m rebids deny a 4cM.

I think this makes sense on a number of counts: majors are more important, and we want the 1M rebids to be more frequent on account of being cheaper. I've played other structures (e.g. TOSR, KK Relay and other relay-based continuations) but found them less effective than sticking with MAFIA.
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#6 User is offline   Shugart23 

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Posted Yesterday, 10:39

I don’t think we can use that. We use 1c-1d-1h as forcing to 1s and then opener will either show a real heart suit ( by bidding hearts ir a side suit) or by bidding 1,2 or 3NT depending upon point count. The problem we had with these cards is im not showing the club stop
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#7 User is offline   DavidKok 

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Posted Yesterday, 10:55

Sorry, I'll elaborate on your original question.
I think showing stoppers is bad. Your start to the auction has taken up a relatively large amount of bidding space to say comparatively little. Personally I recommend restructuring a little, and the forced 1 relay seems bad to me but is likely saved by its low frequency.
Independently, I would stay away from stopper showing. You've used several bids to say only a limited amount about shape, and I would allocate almost all remaining bidding space to catch up on this aspect.
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#8 User is offline   mycroft 

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Posted Yesterday, 11:12

I'm learning Meckwell Lite, and yes, the response to 1-1 (*) is either 1NT (NF 17-19) or 1 (16-strong 2, F1). I think DJNeill (the author of SMP we're learning this from) would tend to 1NT (I'm still getting used to "if it looks balanced in a mirror, it is").

1NT will get either 2NT (if we're chicken) or 3NT (if we're not), and a good 18...

1 gets 2 "max, 3-card support", and that probably leads to 3NT (likely immediately).

Traditional, where my option is 2, I *hate* 2 (for exactly the reason I hate 2-2; 3). So if I have another reasonable choice, I'll take it. Here, I do (with the joy that Stayman might get us to our 4-4 heart fit a lot easier than when I show primary diamonds and partner can't bid 2 with only 4. And if partner's major is spades, *they're* playing 3NT.

(*) I should say that I am also used to "3 controls is a GF". My partner is more conservative than I, and wants AK-suited. Because (under the caveats of "all this d- system we have to remember") I have more brainspace to be flexible than partner, I do it his way so that he can judge correctly *and* get the system right.
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#9 User is offline   mycroft 

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Posted Yesterday, 11:24

Re: club stopper. 1st, where is the "OMG they might cash 5 tricks in a suit into 3NT" epidemic coming from? It happens; experience is saying it's a loser to not pay off to it. Especially when your other choice is wrong-sided 3 or wrong-sided 2NT vs 2NT rebid by opener. And here, unlike the other case, 5 isn't even a dream of an alternative, on the times they are right and 3NT fails.
2nd: 1-1; 2-2NT; 3NT. Even if they *can* cash 5 clubs, what's the chance they lead one? This auction screams for a major suit lead. 1-1; 1NT-3NT even more so, no? Sure, if OL has the 5 clubs, maybe. But, as was said in the other thread:
  • The clubs could be 4-4.
  • Partner could have Qxx or Txxx.
  • They have to find the lead.
  • And even if it is "automatic", with 18 opposite 6 or 7, you'll have a lot of company in 3NT; not being there is really playing top-or-bottom. Do you think that all the above is >50% (and that 3 makes on the repeated taps and bad diamond break?)

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#10 User is offline   shugart24 

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Posted Yesterday, 11:39

so how do you show the various NT ranges (ladder) over 1D response ? We use 1C-1D -1,2,or 3NT and 1C-1D-1H(forcing 1S)-1S-1,2,or 3NT ? --In your system, your 1C-1D-1H or 1S shows the 4 card Major ?
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#11 User is offline   mycroft 

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Posted Yesterday, 11:49

By our book, 1NT is 17-19, 2NT *opening* is 20-21, 2NT is 22-24, and 3NT is 25-26 and we ignore bigger hands.

Advanced method, also in the book, uses 1-1; 2 as Birthright - absolutely equivalent to standard 2-2; 2. Probably, eventually, we'll look at that one. After everything that comes up more often than 25 HCP balanced hands is locked down.
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#12 User is offline   DavidKok 

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Posted Yesterday, 12:22

Helene and I played:

1-1; 1NT: 17-19;
1-1; 2NT: 20-22;
1-1; 2-2; 2NT: 23+;

You can improve on this, for example playing 1-1; 2NT as 20-21, 1-1; 2-2; 2NT as 23-24, and requiring a second jump with 25+. By frequency the increased definition on the weaker ranges is superior to catering to 25+. But it is so rare that we didn't bother.

In the Cambrige Heart Complex you'd play something like:

1-1; 1NT: 17-19
1-1; 1-1; 1NT: 20-21 (note that 1 is not forced, but all higher rebids are descriptive and almost all show 5(+) HCP and allow for relaying and are therefore safe opposite 20-21 balanced).
1-1; 1-1; 2NT: 22-23
1-1; 2NT: 24+ - though optionally you can put this through 1 too, and also the jumps to 3NT and up are still unused.
There's room to shuffle things around here, but if your ladder up to 23 points or so is solid you're golden almost always. In particular I'm curious about making the lowest range 17-18 here.

In older Precision variants the 2NT opening was kept natural, e.g. 20-21. My personal experience is that it's much more comfortable putting this in 1. Not because this frees up 2NT for some other (typically preemptive) use, though that's cute when it comes up, but because big balanced hands simply do well in 1. Even if you 'level with the field' by bidding 1-1; 2NT to show the same hand a standard bidder would open 2NT with, you've got the extra information that responder is weak and you don't need to look for slam.
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#13 User is offline   awm 

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Posted Yesterday, 16:15

I agree it's generally better in these auctions to show majors first (which keeps the bidding lower), but on this hand I'd ask:

1. What was the range of 2? I'd assume something like 16-20, with stronger hands doing something else?
2. You need a way to distinguish a "courtesy raise" of diamonds with a fit and not much vs. a serious invite with 6-7 points. Of course, possibly you can pass with the "courtesy raise" depending on what opener's upper limit for 2 is.

Assuming 3 is a real invite, I think opener should bid 3 over 3, allowing partner to try 3NT. If 3 could be 3-4 points and a "courtesy bid" with a fit, you need a way to distinguish (maybe 2NT or 3 as a good raise).

It doesn't make sense to show stoppers immediately on this auction, especially if opener can still have a four-card major (which apparently he can). Stoppers are usually not the most important thing -- even if you are off a suit there's a good chance it's breaking with opponents letting you bid 1-P-1-P and not coming in. And you can look for at least major suit stoppers after the 3 raise (assuming you figure out that you have game values).
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#14 User is offline   johnu 

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Posted Today, 03:32

As steve2005 posted, I would also rebid 1NT with a semi-balanced hand and wouldn't dream about rebidding 2 on a mediocre 5 card suit. For responder, 3 controls, an ace and a king is such a nice honor structure (not including the nice club spots) that I would have no problem making a response that showed 8+ HCP (K&R is 7.65 points). While the shape isn't great, you do have support for whatever suit(s) partner may have. Unless you have a structure to show a very maximum negative response.

With a real 2 major-minor suiter, I would rebid 1 of the major which makes it a lot easier to find a major suit fit and keeps the bidding at a manageable level.
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