Top and bottom cue bids ACBL 2/1
#1
Posted 2010-July-03, 22:06
Received no responses
New question.
Anyone have opinions about TOP & BOTTOM CUE BIDS and
how to play them and do you use EQUAL LEVEL CONVERSION
in connection with Top & Bottom Cue Bids
Thank you
#2
Posted 2010-July-03, 23:07
Played it 10 years ago. Do not like it at all.
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#3
Posted 2010-July-04, 06:16
Phil, on Jul 4 2010, 01:07 AM, said:
Played it 10 years ago. Do not like it at all.
Why not?
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#4
Posted 2010-July-04, 07:31
#5
Posted 2010-July-04, 07:33
The frequency of 4-6 M/m hands seems less, and we tend to just overcall the minor when they do come up. But the Michaels-type hands come up a lot, and we would rather be able to do that.
#6
Posted 2010-July-04, 10:05
blackshoe, on Jul 4 2010, 07:16 AM, said:
Phil, on Jul 4 2010, 01:07 AM, said:
Played it 10 years ago. Do not like it at all.
Why not?
I'm going on memory, but as I recall there are three elements to this:
- T and B
- Bottom and Bottom overcalls
- ELC
T and B are OK to get both suits in and somewhat useful. But you give up a lot to have this luxury. I am not clear on whether or not this call showed 4+ in the upper or promised 5-5.
B and B awkward. If memory serves me correctly,
(1♣) - 2♦ shows diamonds and 4 hearts
(1♦) - 3♣ shows clubs and hearts, but exactly four of them (2N showed the 5-5). It always seemed weird to press this hand type up to the 3 level.
ELC with both majors is AWFUL. (1m) - x - (pass) - 2 other minor; (pass) - 2♥ is supposed to be "the majors". But is it: 5-5, 4-5 or even 5-4? What is the upper limit of the strength? What do you do with various strong hands with hearts.
Play Overcall Structure. It is far superior to this.
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#7
Posted 2010-July-04, 10:26
Phil, on Jul 4 2010, 11:05 AM, said:
blackshoe, on Jul 4 2010, 07:16 AM, said:
Phil, on Jul 4 2010, 01:07 AM, said:
Played it 10 years ago. Do not like it at all.
Why not?
I'm going on memory, but as I recall there are three elements to this:
- T and B
- Bottom and Bottom overcalls
- ELC
T and B are OK to get both suits in and somewhat useful. But you give up a lot to have this luxury. I am not clear on whether or not this call showed 4+ in the upper or promised 5-5.
B and B awkward. If memory serves me correctly,
(1♣) - 2♦ shows diamonds and 4 hearts
(1♦) - 3♣ shows clubs and hearts, but exactly four of them (2N showed the 5-5). It always seemed weird to press this hand type up to the 3 level.
ELC with both majors is AWFUL. (1m) - x - (pass) - 2 other minor; (pass) - 2♥ is supposed to be "the majors". But is it: 5-5, 4-5 or even 5-4? What is the upper limit of the strength? What do you do with various strong hands with hearts.
Play Overcall Structure. It is far superior to this.
Explain Overcall Structure
Thank You
#9
Posted 2010-July-04, 16:33
Phil, on Jul 4 2010, 11:05 AM, said:
Wow Phil you haven't done this in ages! (I didn't even know you still play it.)
#10
Posted 2010-July-04, 19:12
cherdanno, on Jul 4 2010, 05:33 PM, said:
Phil, on Jul 4 2010, 11:05 AM, said:
Wow Phil you haven't done this in ages! (I didn't even know you still play it.)
Yeah but I'm not as dogmatic about it. OS is still a part of two infrequent and one frequent partnership.
I like it when I get power x or RJO and I'm a little nervous when I have a minimum 1NTO hand.
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#11
Posted 2010-July-04, 21:06
I'll take a look at the Overcall Structure.
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#12
Posted 2010-July-04, 21:23
#13
Posted 2010-October-20, 08:25
#15
Posted 2010-October-20, 14:50
(1) What do you gain? These patterns are actually pretty hard to bid without a gadget. For example, RHO opens 1♣, I have 4♠-2♥-5♦-2♣ . If I overcall in diamonds, it's pretty easy to lose the spades after a club raise or heart bid and raise. If I overcall in spades, partner will never get my relative suit lengths correct. If I double, partner will probably bid hearts (maybe a large number of hearts). These are also very common hand patterns, much more common than 5-5 in the same suits for example.
(2) What do you lose? Michaels cuebids, basically. I'm not convinced these are a big winner (in fact I've seen some strong players go for numbers recently after ill-advised Michaels bids). Most of the time you can just overcall your higher suit (usually spades). This has some risk of losing the second suit, but it also conceals the second suit from the opponents in a lot of cases (i.e. when it's their hand, or when you end up declaring in your higher suit anyway). It also keeps the auction lower and makes it a lot tougher for opponents to penalize.
(3) What about other "gadget" treatments? Overcall structure uses Roman Jumps, where you lose most of your two-level weak jump overcalls in exchange for being able to show these same hand types (presumably you overcall at the one-level on those). Another alternative is Raptor 1NT, where you lose the natural 1NT overcall (usually off-shape double on those). I'd much rather lose Michaels cuebid than lose my two-level preempts or my natural 1NT overcalls... but apparently some people feel differently.
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#16
Posted 2010-October-20, 15:10
1D-(2D) - ??, where 2D is 5+clubs, 4+spades
What are your agreements re:
2H
2S
3C
3H
other jumps?
1H-(2H)-??, where 2H is 5+clubs, 4+spades
Your agreements now?
And does it change things if the call shows 5/5+? (i.e., when the call only shows 4+ spades, you may want a natural spade available)
Thanks.
"...we live off being battle-scarred veterans who manage to hate our opponents slightly more than we hate each other. -- Hamman, re: Wolff
#17
Posted 2010-October-21, 13:18
In general, if they make a call that has one known five+ card suit then: (1) Bidding the suit they showed is a strong raise of partner (2) Double is general values/desire to penalize (3) Other calls are natural, with new suits being forcing one round.
So here, after 1♥-(2♥) showing 5+♣ and 4+♠, I would have: (1) 3♣ is a limit raise or better of hearts (2) Double is general values/desire to penalize (3) 2♠, 3♦ are natural and forcing; 2NT is invitational with appropriate stoppers; 3♥ is constructive but less than limit raise. I would play the same defense if 2♥ showed 5+♣ and an unspecified five-card pointy suit.
If they make a call that has two known five+ card suits, then: (1) Bidding one of their suits shows a good hand with one of "our" suits (their lower denomination = our lower denomination) (2) Double is general values/desire to penalize (3) Other calls are natural and not forcing.
So here, after 1♥-(2♥) showing 5+♣ and 5+♠, I would have (1) 2♠ shows our higher suit, hearts, a limit raise or better and 3♣ shows our lower suit, diamonds, with game invitational or better values (2) Double is defensive (3) 3♦, 3♥ are constructive but not invitational, 2NT is a natural invite.
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#18
Posted 2010-October-21, 14:07
I certainly think there are better toys out there than Top and Bottom -- for that matter, it's almost certainly not right to play the "same" type of cuebid over all 4 1-level openings. My personal preference in GCC land is
1C-2C= 4S+5red, 1C-2D= 4H5D
1D-2D=5C+4major, 1D-2H=4S5H
1H-2H=4S+5minor
and to not show 4-5s at the 3-level (so 1S-2S is still 5H+5minor, and 2NT is still 5-5 two lowest.)
My impression is you should play a 4-5 overcall scheme OR equal-level conversion, NOT both. I can't see any merit at all to playing "5-5 top and bottom" instead of "5-5 Michaels." It's not like the Michaels ambiguity is impossible to sort out.
#19
Posted 2010-October-21, 14:12
X-negative
2M-natural, F1
2NT 11ish... I'd have to ask my regular partner which suits it promises stoppers in
3C-strong diamond raise
3D-weak
3M-fit-jump (for us, HHxxx in the major and any 4 of the minor)
More generally, a suit they promise 5 of becomes a cuebid. If they promise two of them, assume an unusual-vs-unusual type of structure. A suit they promise only 4 of remains naturally biddable by our side.
#20
Posted 2010-October-21, 14:20
Also, 1D-(2D)-2H? NF Const?
"...we live off being battle-scarred veterans who manage to hate our opponents slightly more than we hate each other. -- Hamman, re: Wolff