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Opening with a balanced five-card major 1 No-trump vs. 1 of the major

#61 User is offline   Fluffy 

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Posted 2004-September-09, 17:01

tysen2k, on Sep 9 2004, 09:26 PM, said:

Yuck! You want to bid 2N on 15-17 when partner very likely only has 6-7? And you might not even be balanced so partner can't really evaluate his shape? I think you made my point for me; not opening these hands with 1N puts more burden on you major openings.

Tysen

What? 6-7? and it is wrong?.

Lets start: partner is 6-10 (4-10 on 2/1), when he has 6-7 we have 21-24... I don´t see any problem about playing 2NT.

What about when he has 8? you could argue he cannot invite liek he woudl with 2NT if 1NT was opened, but instead he knows about a 5 card major and a 3+ minor suit, he has better info evaluating his shape, ,kinda better than quantitative biddings.

He has 9-10? there is no difference: same contract on both. (you can bid 3 to get the 5-3 fit still).
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#62 User is offline   Free 

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Posted 2004-September-09, 17:23

I wonder if opening 1NT without a 5 card Major works with light openings. Because if your 2m rebid only shows a 3 card, then how can you show the difference between a very light opener with some distribution and a solid 15-17 5332?

So far it's been hard vs unsoft with arguments, nobody seems to be able to convince anyone else...
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#63 User is offline   the hog 

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Posted 2004-September-09, 17:25

And I don't think it's too much of a burden to bid 15-17 balanced hands with 5-card major as...

1M 1NT
2m 2M
2NT


The problem occurs when responder would have passed out a 1N opening. I am playing 1N, you are playing 2N.
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#64 User is offline   luke warm 

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Posted 2004-September-09, 17:32

pbleighton, on Sep 9 2004, 11:40 PM, said:

"The weak NT is much more frequent with or without the 5cM. Adding 5cM to the weak NT increases the preemptiveness but hurts constructive bidding. Around 12-14, the bonus to preemptiveness still outweighs the constructive burden, so it's worth including 5cM. Go much weaker than that and the loss of constructive bidding hurts more than the bonus of added preemption. The weaker opener gets, the less likely responder is to have an invitational hand that is able to use weapons like Puppet Stayman. The inibility to play in 2M hurts more in MP than IMP's, but it still hurts in both."

Your technical point is valid, but...

1) This assumes that the field were opening the 10/11 5M332s 1M - but they are passing, at least in my neck of the woods. The missed fits are mostly missed by the field
2) You are opening hands you would otherwise pass, and/or cleaning up your 1M openers
3) Most importantly, in my experience, a mini NT is considerably more difficult for the opps to handle than 1M. It forces even good players to guess wrong a lot.

Peter

i have to say i agree, but my prejudice in this area is well known
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#65 User is offline   Fluffy 

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Posted 2004-September-09, 18:33

Free, on Sep 9 2004, 11:23 PM, said:

I wonder if opening 1NT without a 5 card Major works with light openings. Because if your 2m rebid only shows a 3 card, then how can you show the difference between a very light opener with some distribution and a solid 15-17 5332?

It shows 4 card actually, it gets raised with 4, passed with 4 normally, it shows 4 at least.

1-1
2-2
3

is a 5-5.


To Ron...

Yeah Exactly, you are playing 1NT while w play 2.. or you are playing 1NT while we play 2/3/4, on the first on e it probably makes no difference, and on the second you don´t knwo wich is best ;), but I beleive partner having 3+ is more likelly than less.
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#66 User is offline   whereagles 

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Posted 2004-September-10, 01:19

The_Hog, on Sep 10 2004, 12:25 AM, said:

And I don't think it's too much of a burden to bid 15-17 balanced hands with 5-card major as...

1M 1NT
2m 2M
2NT


The problem occurs when responder would have passed out a 1N opening. I am playing 1N, you are playing 2N.

Yes, that's precisely the problem of not opening 1NT. The good thing is not missing major suit fits. I actually prefer to open 1NT, mind you :)

tysen2k said:

Yuck! You want to bid 2N on 15-17 when partner very likely only has 6-7? And you might not even be balanced so partner can't really evaluate his shape? I think you made my point for me; not opening these hands with 1N puts more burden on you major openings.

What's the problem? (15+6)---(17+7) = 21---24. Most of the time you'll have 22+ points, which is usually enough for 2NT. Plus there's a good chance at a residual 5-2 spade fit that can generate tricks. It's not that I like this sort of bidding, but I can imagine some players prefer this to missing major suit fits. Besides, what if opener is unbalanced and 16-17? You'll bid 2NT anyway, in a situation that may be even more misfitted, so what's the big deal?

There's a case for both styles. Only time can tell which is better. At present, any claims of superiority for a given method are premature and should be taken with a grain of salt. Lots of them, actually, LOL ;)
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#67 User is offline   EricK 

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Posted 2004-September-10, 01:40

It is not enough to look at the gains and losses when you open 1NT with a 5cM, you must also look at the gains (definitely these exist!) and losses (are there any?) when you open 1M without a balanced hand.

Eric
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#68 User is offline   mikestar 

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Posted 2004-September-10, 02:25

There are two other factors in this discussion, one is a system design issue, and the other is an empirical question.

In a 2/1 framework I believe that the one bids are overworked and opennig 5M-3--3-2 hands in NT when able helps unburben them a bit. In Precision, the limited suit openings are not nearly so burdened and 1M can take the strain better than a 2/1 1M opener. I particularly prefer to open the major in any kind of Real Diamond Precision, as I normally use a 4-point NT range for these. The absence of the possibility of a 5 card major partially compensates for the wider range.

In any system, the bid you use for these hands will become more frequent and less accurate, the bid you don't use will become less frequent and more accurate. Which tradeoff is better depends on the rest of the system.

The empirical question is: How often does a 5-2 major fit produce a better result than 1NT with the sort of hand that goes 1S-1N-2C-2S (for example) vs 1N-P with responder having a doubleton spade? I've heard KS advocates claim that the 5-2 plays better at least 70% of the time. If this is true, it tilts the argument a bit towards opening the major--if we do well in the 5-2 fit, why not make the bid that ensures we won't miss the 5-3 fit?
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#69 User is offline   pbleighton 

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Posted 2004-September-10, 05:18

"The empirical question is: How often does a 5-2 major fit produce a better result than 1NT with the sort of hand that goes 1S-1N-2C-2S (for example) vs 1N-P with responder having a doubleton spade?"

I've read that sims showed 50-50 results between 1NT and 2M.

Your point on Precision with 12-15 is good.

What would you do with 5cM if you were oplaying a strong club with a 3 point NT range?

Peter
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#70 User is offline   Gerben47 

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Posted 2004-September-10, 07:59

To Fluffy: The Spanish juniors I played against did not play 16 - 18 NT, they played 15 - 17. If you decide to play 15 - 17 instead of 16 - 18 you are way ahead of the field.

Why?
The 1NT rebid shows 12 - 15 HCP. What do you do with 10 opposite this? Playing 15 - 17 you pass. If you pass as well you will miss good 3NT with 15+10 and if you bid you can go down in 2NT. Great...

The 1NT opening bid as 16 - 18 is too infrequent:

15 HCP: 4.4%
16 HCP: 3.3%
17 HCP: 2.4%
18 HCP: 1.6%

For every 10 NT openings 15 - 17 you have only 7 NT openings with 16 - 18. This means you don't get enough out of your sophisticated Stayman and Transfers or Keri or whatever.

The only reason 16 - 18 might work is to open all 19+ NT hands on the 2-level to free the 2NT rebid for something else, but I guess that is not done in the "standard" Spanish.
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#71 User is offline   Gerben47 

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Posted 2004-September-10, 08:05

Mikestar: That's the strength of Weak Opening Systems. In the 8 - 12 HCP range you can have very frequent AND accurate opening bids. There are more hands in the 8 - 11HCP range (36.6%) than in the 12 - 37 HCP range (34.4%)!
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#72 User is offline   mikestar 

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Posted 2004-September-10, 08:48

pbleighton, on Sep 10 2004, 11:18 AM, said:

Your point on Precision with 12-15 is good.

What would you do with 5cM if you were oplaying a strong club with a 3 point NT range?

With a three point range, I feel more comfortable opening 1NT with 5M-3-3-2, but would not argue with a partner who had the opposite preference, while playing 2/1 I would try to persude a partenr with an opposite view to change his mind.
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#73 User is offline   mikestar 

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Posted 2004-September-10, 08:59

Gerben47, on Sep 10 2004, 02:05 PM, said:

Mikestar: That's the strength of Weak Opening Systems. In the 8 - 12 HCP range you can have very frequent AND accurate opening bids. There are more hands in the 8 - 11HCP range (36.6%) than in the 12 - 37 HCP range (34.4%)!

The weakness of WOS is those not exactly rare 12-37 hands. Ignoring regualtory issues, a forcing pass opening is much more subject to disruption by intervention than a Precision 1C. Opponents will not tend to be so destructive, but they will have many hands worth constructive intervention.

In an auction such as P-(1S)-P-(3S) I'm much more comfortable if my initial pass was a average 9 count than an average 15 count. In the former case I'm not missing anything and can pass comfortably, in the latter case I am really risking missing something if I pass again, but I'm taking my life in my hands to bid--we have a fit, but can we find it?

By the way, I am a fairly strong advocate of a conservative Precision approach, requiring 17 HCP for 1C and being fairly strict about it, vs the usual 16 HCP requirement applied fairly loosely that is often encountered. The difference is about a point and a half extra defense and I find it helps in coping with intervention.
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#74 User is offline   Fluffy 

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Posted 2004-September-10, 09:41

Hey Gerben!

I never mant that 16-18 is a good range, just to note it actually exists.


To mikestar:

That thing you said about playing 2 on the 5-2 fit goes only for weak NT, playing strong NT after 1-1NT-2-2 you are gonna rebid 2NT.

Quote

I've read that sims showed 50-50 results between 1NT and 2M


You are talking about any 5-2 fits or when opener has the 5c suit?, when it is responder (Weak hand) who has teh 5c suit it is clear that has to play in 2M, since you will hardly have netries enough to stablish the suit.
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#75 User is offline   pbleighton 

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Posted 2004-September-10, 19:09

"You are talking about any 5-2 fits or when opener has the 5c suit?, when it is responder (Weak hand) who has teh 5c suit it is clear that has to play in 2M, since you will hardly have netries enough to stablish the suit. "

I believe that the study was after 1M-1NT(forcing)-2x-2M, though I'm not sure.

Peter
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#76 User is offline   Antoine Fourrière 

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Posted 2004-September-10, 20:06

1)The French, who (mistakenly in my view) seldom open 1N with a five-card major, also don't open 1N a good (bad) half of their 15-HCP, 4333 or 4432 hands. (Of course, they add one point for a five-card minor and two points for a six-card minor.) The four-point range NT rebid doesn't seem to hurt. If responder has a bad 10 HCP, he passes. Otherwise, he can checkback for size and three-card support and stop in two of his major when there is a seven-card fit.

2)As other people have remarked, you must consider the help opening 1N with a five-card major brings to the rest of your system.
When you play the strong notrump, it allows you to play 1N in front of 5-8 HCP. But it also frees the 2N rebid, allowing for instance a structure such as
1 2
2 as usual
2 weakish without a six-card suit, but forcing one round if you have to cater to some 14-HCP hands
2N game force with clubs (3 by responder is noncommital)
3 6 spades (3 and 3 by responder are nonforcing)
3 forcing if 2 is forcing, but nonforcing if 2 is nonforcing
3, 3 splinters
3N 5=2=4=2 if 2 is nonforcing (seems not too good)
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#77 User is offline   Fluffy 

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Posted 2004-September-11, 06:08

if 2NT is not natural then what do you bid with 18-20?
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#78 User is offline   nikos59 

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Posted 2004-September-11, 14:14

Perhaps it has already been posted (thread is too long to
check completely) but I am a believer in what the great
Edgar Kaplan wrote:

"I do not guarantee I'll never open one notrump holding a five-card major, but so far in a long bridge career I have never found the occasion to do so."

He wrote this in 1996, one year before his death.

Nikos
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