Restrict on points or shape?
#1
Posted 2011-January-27, 08:43
1) 11-13, any shape without a five card or longer major
2) 11-15, if balanced 11-13, otherwise with ♦s unbalanced or a 5-4-3-1 with 3♦s and 5♣s
Thanks in advance!
#2
Posted 2011-January-27, 09:18
I've played both sorts of openings before, but the continuations and intervention handling are very different. I've played the first opening several years ago in an old local system with the range 10-14. It worked ok with an INV+ relay. Doubling low-level interference was equal to the INV+ relay and worked ok. These days I play the 2nd opening in one of my partnerships, but the continuations are natural. Intervention handling is also different, although Dbl tends to show values with a balanced hand (suggesting penalizing opps). I need more experience with it, but it also seems to work...
The first is pure randomness considering the minors. The auction 1♦-1X-2♣ now has to show ♣, while with the 2nd opening it would show both minors. The 54+m handtype becomes difficult in the first case, but that's pretty much it. You can still rebid your 5 card suit if it has decent quality.
One neat feature of this opening is that in competitive auctions the opener can just bid 2M on a decent hand with a good 4 card suit. I don't know if it's a good idea or not, but I do know that I did this several times in the past with success.
In my limited experience the 2nd opening is also pretty random and doesn't really affect what responder does. Maybe with a 5 card ♦ responder has an easier time, but that's about it. Opener can show his minor 2-suiters with 1♦-1X-2♣, but the longest suit is usually unknown, so it's still not perfect.
Handling interference should also pretty similar imo.
So, comparing these 2 openings on their own, I'd vote for the first one. The smaller point range surely must help in being more accurate, you can play some sort of GF relay much easier (less trouble with INV hands I mean),...
#3
Posted 2011-January-27, 10:38
Anyway, without knowing anything else I would always pick the 2nd one.
#4
Posted 2011-January-27, 13:16
#5
Posted 2011-January-28, 09:46
#6
Posted 2011-January-28, 20:40
Say you are playing a modified Polish ♣ system where 1♣ is 12-14 bal (includes 5-4-2-2s with 5♣s), three suiter short ♦ (4-4-1-4/4-4-0-5/4-3-1-5/3-4-1-5), ♣s 16+ or any 18+ (same issue in Tarzan Precision where 1♣ 16+, 1NT 12-15, 2♦ three suiter short ♦, 1♦ unbal ♦s, 2♣ natural ♣s).
Which would you like:
1) 1♦: 4+♦s unbalanced,
-- 2♣: 6+♣s or 4-1-3-5/1-4-3-5
2) 1♦: 4+♦s unbalanced or 4-1-3-5/1-4-3-5 (only 3♦s with 5♣s),
-- 2♣: 6+♣s
That is which opening do you make less than perfect, 1♦ as 3+ (instead of 4+) or 2♣ as 5+ (instead of 6+)
Btw a mod Polish ♣ system I would like to see is one with 2♦ as 18-19 bal. The reason for this is that the 18-19 bal can be stuck if the opps compete and responder has to assume the frequent 12-14 bal opening.
#7
Posted 2011-January-28, 20:42
#8
Posted 2011-January-29, 08:47
(Actually I like it to deny a major, but that only really works well in a blue-club style canape system)
The simple reason why is that I prefer to have my ambiguity at a lower level.
Obviously it isn't quite that simple, because of the relative frequency of the two hand types I'm going to be opening an ambiguous 1D more often than an ambiguous 2C.
#9
Posted 2011-January-29, 15:05
2-suiters + bal in one, // 1-suiter + 3-suiter rest in other;
3-s + bal // 2-s + 1-s
1-s + bal // 2-s + 3-s
have short // bal
C+2nd in 1C // D+2nd in 1D
#10
Posted 2011-January-31, 02:30
In a Polish club system, I'm not sure what's best. The weak NT is out of 1♦ so you already have less ambiguity. If you're happy to treat a (42)-2-5 hand as balanced and open it 1♣, then you can play 1♦ as 3+♦ (and only 3 with a singleton). This keeps the ♦ opening pretty natural and lets responder compete.
I don't have enough experience with Polish Club to really appreciate the natural unbalanced 1♦ opening like The Hog does for example.
#11
Posted 2011-January-31, 16:11
Let 1♣ include (41)35 patterns. Then 1♦ can guarantee four and 2♣ can guarantee six. Thus 1♣ is a minimum opener balanced or three-suited without four diamonds, or various strong types.
Treating three-suiters as balanced hands (you rebid your major after 1♣-1♦ or rebid 1NT after 1♣-1M if they bid your singleton) tends not to be particularly costly, especially when you have an opportunity to find major-suit fits at the one-level beforehand (i.e. the biggest problem is 1NT-all pass when you have a 4-4 major fit and a ruffing value in the opener hand). You get a lot of compensation for this in having both the 1♦ and 2♣ openings "real."
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#12
Posted 2011-February-01, 05:17