The Natural (Or Morbidly Strange) Order of Things Nominating Shortages
#1
Posted 2008-January-02, 15:49
In Ultra when patterning out we show our shortages in low-high-mid-none order, but I am starting to consider using high-low-mid-none order instead.
Does order really matter?
#2
Posted 2008-January-02, 16:23
(1) The various game contracts are at different levels. Sometimes you want to decide between 3NT if partner is short in your major versus four of your major if partner's shortness is elsewhere (and thus he has 2-3 cards in your major). This is more frequent when you're considering playing in a major suit (a lot of times 3NT is better than 5m anyway), so if one of high shortage and low shortage will take you past 3NT, it's better that it be low shortage (i.e. the hand with length in the side major bypasses 3NT).
(2) Hands with no shortage at all typically have less playing strength. For this reason it might be nice for "no shortage" to resolve lower than the other options as you're less likely to have slam.
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#3
Posted 2008-January-02, 16:36
#4
Posted 2008-January-02, 17:25
-P.J. Painter.
#5
Posted 2008-January-02, 23:11
#6
Posted 2008-January-03, 00:02
I think knowing short leaves high hopes -- so keep relaying (or kills hope right now). Those 'wrong' 2nd suit hands won't even try whereas 'right' short eagers on.
The short is more promotable/demotable than 2nd suit so that info needed 1st.
#7
Posted 2008-January-03, 03:37
#8
Posted 2008-January-03, 08:36
1C* - 1H*
1S* - 2C*
2D* - 2H*
2S*
Here's a typical sequence for us: strong club, 4+ spades G/F, waiting, any canape, which one, club canape of 5 clubs, and now asking for the remainder of the hand.
Responses: 2NT - showing 4-3-1-5, 3C - showing 4-1-3-5, and 3D being the 4225 hand. If I used a H-M-L I lose the ability to play in the third seat by implication, but if H-L-M, then I am still ahead of the curve so to speak.
With 5M and 4m handtypes over a forcing club, this is where the problem is starting to occur
1C - 1H
1S - 2D*
2H* - 2S* (5M, 4D)
2NT*
Over this, 3C becomes 5-3-4-1, which nominates the shortage directly. With H-M-L I think I have more flow in the structures hence the possible change.
#9
Posted 2008-January-03, 09:33
keylime, on Jan 3 2008, 05:36 PM, said:
1C* - 1H*
1S* - 2C*
2D* - 2H*
2S*
Here's a typical sequence for us: strong club, 4+ spades G/F, waiting, any canape, which one, club canape of 5 clubs, and now asking for the remainder of the hand.
Responses: 2NT - showing 4-3-1-5, 3C - showing 4-1-3-5, and 3D being the 4225 hand. If I used a H-M-L I lose the ability to play in the third seat by implication, but if H-L-M, then I am still ahead of the curve so to speak.
With 5M and 4m handtypes over a forcing club, this is where the problem is starting to occur
1C - 1H
1S - 2D*
2H* - 2S* (5M, 4D)
2NT*
Over this, 3C becomes 5-3-4-1, which nominates the shortage directly. With H-M-L I think I have more flow in the structures hence the possible change.
Hi Dwayne:
I'm skeptical (to say the least) whether its a good idea to design homebrew relay systems. You're issue isn't the order in which you're resolving suits, but rather that the relay structure itself is incoherrent.
I think that you'd do much better to adopt a standard symmetric relay type module over your strong club opening. A lot of folks have spent a lot of effort working on Symmetric. I don't think that you'll do a better job reinventing the wheel.
Case, in point - Heres a standard symmtric scheme to describe two suiters with Spades and Diamonds
1♣ - 1♥ 1C = strong, 1♥ = 4+ Spades
1♠ - 2♣ 1S = relay, 2♣ = two suited with Spades and Diamonds
2♦ = 2♦ = relay
At this point in time
2♥ = 4 Hearts and 5+ Diamonds (2♠ is relay, after which you mirror 2N+)
2♠ = 5+ Spades, and 5+ Diamonds
2N = 4 Diamonds and 5+ Hearts, high shortage
3♣ = 2=5=4=2 shape
3♦ = 1=5=4=3 shape
3♥ = 1=6=4=2 shape
The entire scheme is completely symmetric. Any 5431 is always resolved at 3♦. Any 6421 is always resolved at 3♥.
This significantly improves efficiently and decreases memory load.
#10
Posted 2008-January-10, 11:22
hrothgar, on Jan 3 2008, 10:33 AM, said:
keylime, on Jan 3 2008, 05:36 PM, said:
Hi Dwayne:
I'm skeptical (to say the least) whether its a good idea to design homebrew relay systems. You're issue isn't the order in which you're resolving suits, but rather that the relay structure itself is incoherrent.
I think that you'd do much better to adopt a standard symmetric relay type module over your strong club opening. A lot of folks have spent a lot of effort working on Symmetric. I don't think that you'll do a better job reinventing the wheel.
Second that -- using symmetric relay makes much more sense that trying to do it anew.
BTW, all the relay systems I have used High-Mid-Low -- maybe it's a symmetric thing?