Against a natural suit opening, after [1♦]-1♠-p-? : I'd bid 2♦ with most decent hands with 3+ spades unless there was another suit to bid (new suit forcing for us). A jump to 3♠ would be pre-emptive.
After a Precision 1♦ opener which may contain as few as one diamond, it seems we may want to bid 2♦ as a natural bid.
In which case am I right in thinking that 2NT is the bid to use to show a decent raise? Or is a pre-emptive raise redundant here given LHO is limited to 15 HCP and RHO hasn't said anything, leaving 3♠ a natural invite?
I'd be interested to see other people's defensive structures after the 1D opener.
Thanks.
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After LHO opens 1D Precision... How to support partner's overcall
#2
Posted 2012-September-10, 06:00
If the opponents bid another suit, then ♦-bids by us become natural. If not, we treat ♦ as an enemy suit, so we would bid 2♦ with a good raise.
#3
Posted 2012-September-10, 06:39
Before we played transfer responses to overcalls (including 1NT when they open a short club or diamond, not everyone's taste), we ignored the fact that one diamond could be short and still used 2♦ as the constructive raise. Hands with diamonds had to respond one notrump or find another bid. We do use 2NT as a good 4-card raise.
The concept that you can improve this because the opener is limited and his partner has passed the overcall is a good one. However, for some of us, the memory load is probably not worth the benefit.
The concept that you can improve this because the opener is limited and his partner has passed the overcall is a good one. However, for some of us, the memory load is probably not worth the benefit.
#4
Posted 2012-September-10, 07:06
Treat it as natural. Yes, it COULD BE short, but it usually isn't, and I'm not convinced any other treatment has any real advantage. The 1♦ bid is not the greatest opening in the system, and, much like the 2♣ opening, you shouldn't feel any special obligation to bid.
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