Posted 2011-March-27, 19:00
Thanks for the edification!
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1) 1N as 12-15 or 18+? So partner bids something with 8 points and finds out partner has the weak NT or passes with 7 and finds out partner has the strong NT. Unplayable.
reply:
I see your point. Change made... TY.
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2) Opening at the 4-level with 18+ and a 7-cd suit? You will be too high to start a conversation with your partner. You will be too high sometimes to make your bid. You have bypassed 3N.
reply:
OK, deleted that option. I'm not really sure why I had that one in there. Brain fart perhaps? Those do happen to us "older" folk. LOL
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3) Opening 1S with AKxx x xx AKxxxx or AKxxxx x xx AKxx? Partner will have to guess what 1S-1N, 2C shows.
reply:
In the case of the club suit, that is a problem, however, Would not a rebid of spades, probably at the 2 level, show 5+ spades, and still show 4+ clubs? And a future rebid of clubs show 5-5 distribution or better?
I'm beginning to think of reverting back to 1C as 12-15(16?) and no 5CM.
However, I have come to the conclusion that two versions need to be created, one for novices and lower level intermediates, and one for advanced intermediates and above. Much of the material recommended,
suggested, is rather daunting. Not that I have any fears of tackling it; just that it requires a helluva lot of digesting! lol
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4) 1C as 18+ usually unbalanced? Way too infrequent for such an important opening. What is 1C-1D, 1N?
reply:
I would take that to mean even distribution, no 5 card suits, at least 16 HCP (in case of 4-4-4-1 type shape), and unable to open with 2N...
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5) What do you do with balanced 16-17?
reply:
Actually, I think I can argue that one... Doesn't the same situation arrise with "regular" systems: 1N=16-18 or 15-17, and 2N=20-22?... What happened to 18 and 19? (And yes, I did note it was accounted for in your recommendations at the end.)
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I think that the core of your Galwood idea is your desire to open at the 1-level with 2-suited hands and at the 2 or higher level with 1-suited hands. Is that right? If so, you are distorting your openings around this concept and doing it at the expense of your 1N (and now) 1C openings.
You also are well-versed in the probabilities for 1-suited vs 2-suited etc patterns. I think you are missing something that matters much more.
reply:
You are quite correct about my desire - which may well get quashed, as I am seeing and learning quickly. The Truscott structure is rather precise, but, I can't see a novice or regular intermediate actually using it. (I guess I'd better "improve" myself, huh? LOL
So, back to the drawing board. Back to more studying and experimenting.
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I would recommend that you study how the Fibonacci sequence applies to bidding. I think you would also do well if you studied symmetric relay systems. These two things would give you a better idea for how much information ought to be carried in a particular bid. Basically, the lower the bid, the more ambiguous it should be.
reply:
Now, there's a gem! Thanks. But now another question arises: if the more ambiguous an opening bid is, does that not violate one or more of "David's Bidding Principles", especially relating to giving the opponents too much room to interfere?
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I asked you before to map out the frequency of your openings. Have you done that for this latest? I would guess...
1C-7%
1D-10%
1H-12%
1S- 15%
1N-30%
etc
reply:
In random distribution of hands:
7-11 HCP occurs 38.9% of the time;
12-15 HCP occurs 31.6% of the time;
16-17 HCP occurs 15.2% of the time;
18+ HCP occurs 8.8% of the time.
Now comes the "tricky" part, combining HCP distributions with suit distributions. I am not even going to try - brain slowly frying... lol
To answer your question about mapping the occurences of various bids:
1C (showing 18+ HCP) should occur roughly 40% of the time.
1D/H/S should occur 60% of the time, obviously w/ some overlap w/1C - apples and oranges.
So, now come the big questions to be resolved:
1. Open with how many points? Current practice seems to favor 12.
2. Should 1N opening be the big gun, 16+ HCP, no 5-card suit?
3. Should any 2 level opening remain preemptive and use opener's 2nd round bid be a jump shift, indicating 16+ HCP and a long suit?
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Do you see the problem here?
reply:
Yes, I think so. However, that answer comes from a brain-fried status. LOL
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You are focused on describing opener's hand. You frequently let opener show too much preference or too much direction. Your 2-level bids are arguably ok, but your 3 and 4-level openings are much too preemptive. You prevent responder from describing his own hand and prevent opener from describing anything more about his hand.
reply:
This stems from my own thinking (strategy) that responder being second to bid, is the first one to find out about opener's hand, and, therefore, opener should strive to let responder know as much as possible.
What you seem to be suggesting is the opposite, that opener should provide as little information as possible, while responder begins to supply information him/herself. I suppose that this strategy gives the LHO little if anything to go on, and may well shut out the RHO, if responder has any good values.
Yet, in the opening bids you described, the LHO seems to have some pretty good idea about opener's hand, points and shape. So, where is the advantage?
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Here's an example of opening bids that are designed with preference in mind. See how very different these openings are from what you've been coming up with...
1C-16+
1D-2+ diamonds
1H-4+ hearts
1S-5+ spades
1N-13-15 balanced
2C-6+ clubs
2D-3-suited, short diamonds
Each successive suit opening has a higher length requirement. This means that each higher suit opening is less frequent than its predecessor and shows a fewer number of possible hand patterns.
Here's our system which hopefully illustrates the same idea...
1C-16+
1D-0+ diamonds
1H-5 hearts
1S-5 spades
1N-14-16
2C-6 clubs, could have 4 diamonds or 4 spades
2D-6 diamonds, could have 4 clubs
2N-6 clubs, 4 hearts
The other major thing I think you should work on is how to show your balanced hands in useful (probably 3 pt) ranges. For Precision it's typically...
1D-1M, 1N 11-13
1N 14-16
1C-1D, 1N 17-19
2N 20-21
1C-1D, 2N 22-23
Balanced hands are very common and very easy to describe and very useful for partner to know about.
reply:
Would it be OK with you to borrow off these ideas?
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last comment:
Well, I "knew" I had a lot to learn... Just didn't know how much I didn't know. I'm going to have to review, digest, and "ruminate".
Again, my humble thanks for your help!
Georges,
Quote
It's always easy when you know the answer.