Multi vs Weak twos
#1
Posted 2011-January-03, 17:21
And if you dont like either of them. What do you usually play then?
And is there a best tool?
#2
Posted 2011-January-03, 17:41
Like many people, I think that if the choice was:
(1) Weak twos in the majors, I am not allowed to open 2♦ ever
(2) Multi 2♦ (weak only), I am not allowed to open 2M ever
Then it would be better to play option (1) with the weak twos. Weak twos have the advantage that partner can raise more easily (because he knows my suit) and that they don't give opponents an extra way to get in the auction (i.e. by doubling a basically "forcing" 2♦ bid, or by sticking a 2♥ overcall in when opener has spades). There is some advantage in the multi because opponents don't know my suit, or because 2♦ can be passed (leading to some confusion all around) but my view (and the view of most others) is that if you play 2♦ multi, you generally lose a little to pairs playing weak twos (at least in a strong field where people have a reasonable defense to multi at the ready).
With that said, which approach is truly better depends on the use to which other calls are being assigned. People who play multi don't (for the most part) play it because they do so well when they open multi... they accept a small loss when they open multi in exchange for potentially getting big wins out of the alternate 2M openings. For example, I'd suspect that using 2M as intermediate is a big winner when it comes up, and that multi combined with 2M intermediate could be better than weak twos in three suits (i.e. you lose a little when you open multi and a lot when you have to pass a weak 2♦, but you win a lot when you open 2M intermediate and win a little when you open 1M because the intermediate one-suited hands have been removed from consideration). Of course, it's going to depend a little on the rest of your system (in particular, a lot of strong club systems require a couple two-level bids to help with minimum opening hands). And it depends a lot on how prepared your opponents are to defend multi.
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#3
Posted 2011-January-03, 17:49
Multi by itself isn't that great a convention, you're often left in the dark yourself what major partner has when the auction goes say 2D-(2NT)-P-(3NT). The big plus side is that it can be very awkward to defend against, especially if you play it as NF (note you must give up all strong options for it to not be a BSC). The big gain with multi is that you gain 2 new openings (2H and 2S) that you can use for whatever you want (a lot of people use them for weak 5M/4+m hands). If you play it with strong options (my perference), you can release even more sequences.
The big advantage to weak 2s is that you know partner's suit immediately. This allows you to pre-empt the auction a lot more aggressively and can be more descriptive with your enquiries (3 level rebids are all focused on 1 suit as opposed to 2 with multi). The big disadvantage is that it is so much easier to defend against.
#4
Posted 2011-January-03, 18:04
Wilkosz is also good value. An analysis of WC results some years ago showed that Wilkosz gained on average close to 2 IMPs every time it was opened.
Multi 2D has an advantage over weak 2s in that if you play the mini multi you are putting a lot of pressure on the opponents, as 2D can also be passed. Further they free up your 2M openings for something far more useful than the prosaic weak 2, such as 2 suited openings.
#5
Posted 2011-January-03, 18:05
Nature or Nurture?
Yin or Yang?
George Carlin
#6
Posted 2011-January-03, 18:30
#7
Posted 2011-January-03, 19:11
In the end it comes down to whether you get enough from your new 2H and 2S openings to justify using Multi -- and if all you're doing is using them to show bid-suit-and-a-minor, I dont think you are getting great value from them. (And given the choice between Wilkosz+natural 2M, or Multi+two-suited 2M, I'd much rather have Wilkosz plus natural weak twos.)
#8
Posted 2011-January-03, 19:31
I am not big fan of two-suited major suit openings. I think that if they promise 5+5 they are not frequent enough and if they promise 5+4 I don't really need to tell p (and opps) about the side suit but might as well just open 2M on 5-card suits, to the extent that I want to open those hands at all.
In Blackpool, Ant and I played multi and intermediate 2M as Adam also advocates, and I think that makes more sense.
If you play a strong artificial 2♣ with 2♦ waiting then it is cheap to put a weak two in diamonds into the 2♣ opening, then you can use the 2♦ opening for something else. Maybe multi combined with the "Roaring Twos" that Richie plays, if not intermediate twos. OTOH if playing a system like WJ where the 2♣ opening is natural and the 2♦ opening is not needed for constructive purposes, I would prefer to play three week twos.
#9
Posted 2011-January-03, 19:42
#10
Posted 2011-January-03, 20:19
Not necessarily at all!
#11
Posted 2011-January-03, 20:42
#12
Posted 2011-January-04, 03:09
#13
Posted 2011-January-04, 04:53
So perhaps I need a poll option "depends on regulations".
-- Bertrand Russell
#14
Posted 2011-January-04, 05:26
So perhaps against LOLs I would like to play
2♦ W2 Hearts / W2 Spades / 22-23 balanced
2♥ Weak 4-4 in majors
2♠ Spades and a minor
and against Pros I would like to play
2♦ Wilkosz
2♥ W2 Hearts
2♠ W2 Spades
-- Bertrand Russell
#15
Posted 2011-January-04, 05:46
mgoetze, on 2011-January-04, 05:26, said:
Doesn't exactly the same criticism apply to Wilcosz, only more so since you know it's 5-5?
#16
Posted 2011-January-04, 06:09
gnasher, on 2011-January-04, 05:46, said:
Yes, I suppose it does. Wilkosz is more ambiguous though, so at least for the first trick or three declarer might be more in the dark, and I feel we will end up declaring more often when we open Wilkosz.
-- Bertrand Russell
#17
Posted 2011-January-04, 06:09
Quote
2♦ W2 Hearts / W2 Spades / strong balanced
2♥ Weak 4-4 in majors
2♠ Spades and a minor
This is what I play a lot.
2♣ bzw = W2 Diamonds / strongest opening.
Although 2♦ is probably a small loss compared to natural weak two bids against strong opposition, 2♥ for the majors is tough for stronger pairs, as is "Muiderberg" 2♠. Remember, both these openings should be compared with "pass" as they are not opened on the virtual SAYC / SEF table we are comparing to.
The major gain of Wilkosz comes on the maximum 9 - 10 HCP hands that others might open on the 1-level or are just a close pass. Other pairs often get too high before they show 5-5.
It would be interesting to see how much you give up in preemptiveness by including strong variations in Multi.
#18
Posted 2011-January-04, 07:24
wyman, on 2012-May-04, 09:48, said:
rbforster, on 2012-May-20, 21:04, said:
My YouTube Channel
#19
Posted 2011-January-04, 09:52
One clear advantage of multi is that it frees up 2♥ and 2♠ openings, but that's something which is not relevant in this poll imo, it's about the performance of multi vs nat.
#20
Posted 2011-January-04, 10:12
*: most of them were when partner passed already, so maybe it has some merit in 3rd and 4th.