Flip flop for the minors why?
#1 Guest_Jlall_*
Posted 2007-January-26, 10:47
However, it seems like there are two much bigger issues than right siding the contract. First you are losing the whole point of preempting when you do it with 2N and give them an easy cuebid, a pass and then balance, a X and then balance, etc. The great thing about the 3D bid is that LHO with a mediumish hand has to guess whether to bid or pass, either could work badly on the wrong day, and flip flop negates that whole advantage. Also, how does one bid a GF hand with support playing flip flop? Clearly 3D cannot act as limit+ so that means you have to use some bid to show a GF raise, or start with a XX which lets them in easily, let's them preempt you, and doesn't show support. If you use 2N as limit+ then you are much better positioned on a GF hand.
Is rightsiding it every now and then when it's usually irrelevant anyways really worth it?
#2
Posted 2007-January-26, 10:59
#3
Posted 2007-January-26, 11:16
I like one of the chapters in Points Schmoints:
Heading: "Who should declare? Who cares!"
Bergen states that it isn't a players age, gender, number of HCPs or number of masterpoints that should decide whether (s)he's going to declare or not. It's simply a matter of whether he happened to be the first to bid the denomination of the contract if both partners bid correctly according to their system.
#4
Posted 2007-January-26, 11:23
#5
Posted 2007-January-26, 11:35
cherdano, on Jan 26 2007, 12:23 PM, said:
flip flop is a means of raising a minor opening after an immediate takeout double.
A very popular treatment, over a major [x] is to use redouble as tending to deny a fit, a jump raise as weak and 2N as limit (or limit+, depending on style).
An almost equally popular treatment, in the minors, is to 'flip' the meanings of 2N and jump raise: the rationale being, as Justin noted, the desire to right -side 3N when responder has an invitational hand: get the stronger hand on play and the defender with the most cards on lead... and having to guess which suit to attack.. whereas the 4th seat player will more often hit the right lead, since he will lead his longest suit (or strongest if 2 or more equal).
Hence the name 'flip-flop' to designate the treatment of 1minor [x] 2N weak, 3minor limit.... and, as Justin observed, better than limit has to redouble and allow the opps an easy entry...amongst the other issues he identified.
#6
Posted 2007-January-26, 11:41
This technique does allow for a cuebid by advancer after 2NT, which is clearly undesirable. However, it offers the benefit at least of immediately showing support with support, with the "GF or Weak" option being so disparate that it is usually easy to deal with when competition occurs.
-P.J. Painter.
#7 Guest_Jlall_*
Posted 2007-January-26, 12:23
kenrexford, on Jan 26 2007, 12:41 PM, said:
Seems intelligent, and deals with that issue. I'd still rather maximize the preemptive effect though.
#8
Posted 2007-January-26, 12:29
Jlall, on Jan 26 2007, 08:23 PM, said:
kenrexford, on Jan 26 2007, 12:41 PM, said:
Seems intelligent, and deals with that issue. I'd still rather maximize the preemptive effect though.
It gives up the right-siding benefits, though.
Some claim this 2-way 2N makes it dangerous for opponents to compete, but I doubt it. When you have values and want to bid, 2N will be weak most of the time, or quite shapely if GF.
#9
Posted 2007-January-26, 12:54
I don't play flip-flop, and 3 minor remains preemptive. 2N is a limit raise with 4-5 trump, since we play transfers starting with redoubles.
If you are a pick up partnership, I do agree that flip-flop is a bad agreement. I'd just assume play regular Jordan.
Much of what you say is the same claim that my regular partner makes. Any time you introduce an artificial treatment that is a lower ranking denomination than the original artificial meaning, you allow the opponents to make lead directing doubles and other conventional calls that they wouldn't normally be able to make. even an innocuous transfer auction like:
1♥ - (dbl) - 2♦ - ?
where 2♦ is a 3 card constructive raise gives 4th seat a cheap cue bid.
However, in my experience, its a big deal to have the doubler on lead. "Right Siding" to me has nothing to do with the 'strong' hand declaring when one has 14 and the other has 11; rather it has everything to do with having the 13 point hand on lead with the option of having to lead away from tenaces, or having to go passive, instead of having the weak opponent lead through a good hand.
(There's a double edged sword to this. Say we reach a routine 3N. Sometimes the doubler will know what to lead, whereas putting the doubler's partner on lead becomes a 'blind' proposition. On the other hand, frequently the doubler will have two four card suits, and doesn't know their side's real source of tricks, and will be in the blind. I think these circumstances wash each other out).
Defense is easier when dummy puts down a 20 count and declarer has a 6 count, but this is a rare occurence.
In my experience, the biggest gains I have seen is when their strong hand is on lead, and our strong hand is on the table, and the lead comes around to our weaker hand.
#10
Posted 2007-January-26, 13:30
#11
Posted 2007-January-26, 13:44
>I like one of the chapters in Points Schmoints:
>Heading: "Who should declare? Who cares!"
Mike Lawrence gives many examples of what he considers bad bids because they wrong side a contract. Or don't have stoppers in a suit the opps are likely to bid.
The examples seem to make sense, though maybe they are specific to just thos eexamples and can't be extrapolated.
What are some of the "old textbooks"? Are tehy from the 60's? Or maybe general advice given to newer players?
#12
Posted 2007-January-26, 16:19
1m-(dbl)-3m is a normal preemptive raise, promising some values (think working 5 hcp to maybe 9). Five working HCP would be KQxxxx in the opened suit, for instance.
1m-(dbl)-2NT, a really weak preemptive raise OR game forcing raise
This allows you to right side the most likley 3NT contacts (when responder has working values) and serves as a serious warning not to try 3NT otherwise (the weak 2NT bid).
The one big disadvantage so far, is that advancer gets a free cue-bid in your minor suit at the three level, so this might not be a useful treatment. Of course, that is also true of normal flip-flop.
#13
Posted 2007-January-26, 17:59
1) Having the strong hand play 3nt with the strong opp on lead or
2) Stop them from having an extra cuebid available?
3) Yea, you can still play criss cross is on over takeout x with game force hands. which means you give up the abilty to make a wjs in the other minor over x.
#14
Posted 2007-January-26, 22:35
#15
Posted 2007-January-26, 22:55
#16
Posted 2007-January-26, 23:04
Quote
Because they are easy to slip on, lightweight, durable, and never go out of fashion at the beach. And you can get a pair in almost any color, too, and when you are digging in that deep, dark mine its nice to know you are still color-coordinated.
What's that? Oh, he said minor, not miner.
Never mind.
#17
Posted 2007-January-27, 00:21
#18
Posted 2007-January-27, 01:44
Winstonm, on Jan 27 2007, 02:04 AM, said:
Never mind.
GREAT movie.
#19
Posted 2007-January-31, 17:09
#20
Posted 2007-February-01, 04:59
ArcLight, on Jan 26 2007, 09:44 PM, said:
Sorry, that was one of the usual blanket statements of mine.
I have a 1938 book (I think) of Culbertson that is quite extreme with respect to right-siding. Of course nobody teaches using that book anymore but some archaic ideas still live in coffeehouses. But more generally, now I think more about it, it may not be related to the age of the book. Hemskerk's "Acol Plus" and, as you mention, some of Lawrence's books, emphasize right-siding as well and they are not older than Bergen's books.
Thanx for the eye-opener, Arclight.