Strong Club Defense
#1
Posted 2011-November-02, 21:58
X = 5+♥
1♦ = 5+♠
1M = 3/4M and 5+m
1NT = 5+/4+ Majors
2♣ = natural or 5+♥ 5+m
2♦ = natural
2♥ = ♥ or ♠
2♠ = 5+♠ 5+m
2NT = 5+♦ 5+♣
3x = natural
I am happy with most of the structure, but I'm not sure about the 2♣ and 2♦ bids. The other idea I have for those bids is to play:
2♣ = ♣ or ♦
2♦ = 5+♥ 5+m
In the first structure, the 2♣ bid has ♣ 2/3 of the time and 5+♥ 5+♦ 1/3 of the time which may help partner in preempting the opponents, while the alternate structure its purely 50/50. The listed structure gives a definite cue bid over 2♦ with 3♦, but no worthwhile cue bid over 2♣. The alternate structure has a definite cue bid over 2♦ showing 5+♥ 5+m with 2♥ but allows partner to preempt more aggressively when he has a ♥ fit without knowledge of a minor suit fit; however, when we have a ♥ fit, the opponents may be able to just out-bid us in ♠. So, I'm not sure which is better, but I'm happy with the overall structure so far. Input and fresh ideas are welcome.
#2
Posted 2011-November-03, 00:13
- If you put your minor suit overcalls in 1NT (so 1NT = Majors or 1 minor), you can use 1♣-2m as 5+♥&5+m.
#3
Posted 2011-November-03, 00:40
1NT = either 5+ ♣ + 4M (or bad 5M) or 6♥ or 6♠ / minor-Major 2 suiter.
2♣ = Majors (both)
2♦ = 5+ ♦ + 4M (or bad 5M) / 6♥ or 6♠
2♥ = ♥ + a minor (both)
2♠ = ♠ + a minor (both)
2NT = minors (both)
"Learn from the mistakes of others. You won't live long enough to make them all yourself."
"One advantage of bad bidding is that you get practice at playing atrocious contracts."
-Alfred Sheinwold
#4
Posted 2011-November-03, 06:48
#5
Posted 2011-November-03, 12:27
Similarly, does your "one minor" call deny 3M?
It's fine to have two calls for one hand type, but it's not fine to have two calls for one hand type and not have a specific way of resolving it (it is *possible* to say "we do it at random" - if you can prove it, but not "we do whichever we feel like with that hand", because very quickly, the partnership is going to get a feel for what hands partner "feels like" one or the other; at that point if that is not disclosed, it becomes a concealed partnership understanding).
Yes, I know you understand that at least as well as I, Owen, but especially in disruptive conventions, that "added disruption" is very easy to develop, so carefully avoiding it should be explicitly mentioned immediately.
#6
Posted 2011-November-03, 19:53
mycroft, on 2011-November-03, 12:27, said:
Well, it would be like asking the opponents what hand they overcall 1M vs 2M with over your strong club. 2M is more preemptive, i.e. 6M or very good 5, starting with X or 1♦ is either more constructive or only wants to bid above the one level with a fit.
mycroft, on 2011-November-03, 12:27, said:
No, 2m is a very good 5-card suit or a 6-card suit...overcalling 1M either wants partner to lead the M, or your minor isn't so hot.
#7
Posted 2011-November-04, 03:54
George Carlin
#8
Posted 2011-November-04, 07:31
by the sanctioning body?
I rather like an Amsbury adaptation.
2S is 6+S OR 1S444 OR 5-5 touching.
On a double sit with 6+S,
Redouble with 3-other suits,
Bid the lower of touching with 5-5.
Other 2-bids are similar.
Pick what you want 1-bids to be.
They disrupt near zero so need to be competing.
#9
Posted 2011-November-04, 10:51
olien, on 2011-November-03, 19:53, said:
mycroft, on 2011-November-03, 12:27, said:
Well, it would be like asking the opponents what hand they overcall 1M vs 2M with over your strong club. 2M is more preemptive, i.e. 6M or very good 5, starting with X or 1♦ is either more constructive or only wants to bid above the one level with a fit.
mycroft said:
No, 2m is a very good 5-card suit or a 6-card suit...overcalling 1M either wants partner to lead the M, or your minor isn't so hot.
That makes perfect sense, and thanks for knowing.
Edit to add response to dake: In the environment Owen and I are in, a defence to a strong club need not have an anchor suit (unlike defences to NT openers) - as long as the convention isn't "primarily destructive" it can be anything. Case law has put the bar for primarily destructive somewhere between Psycho Suction (the suit bid *or* the next two up) or Wonder bids (this suit *or* takeout of this suit) - legal - and "1 spade shows 13 cards" - primarily destructive.
#10
Posted 2011-November-05, 22:34
olien, on 2011-November-02, 21:58, said:
X = 5+♥
1♦ = 5+♠
1M = 3/4M and 5+m
1NT = 5+/4+ Majors
2♣ = natural or 5+♥ 5+m
2♦ = natural
2♥ = ♥ or ♠
2♠ = 5+♠ 5+m
2NT = 5+♦ 5+♣
3x = natural
I am happy with most of the structure, but I'm not sure about the 2♣ and 2♦ bids. The other idea I have for those bids is to play:
2♣ = ♣ or ♦
2♦ = 5+♥ 5+m
In the first structure, the 2♣ bid has ♣ 2/3 of the time and 5+♥ 5+♦ 1/3 of the time which may help partner in preempting the opponents, while the alternate structure its purely 50/50. The listed structure gives a definite cue bid over 2♦ with 3♦, but no worthwhile cue bid over 2♣. The alternate structure has a definite cue bid over 2♦ showing 5+♥ 5+m with 2♥ but allows partner to preempt more aggressively when he has a ♥ fit without knowledge of a minor suit fit; however, when we have a ♥ fit, the opponents may be able to just out-bid us in ♠. So, I'm not sure which is better, but I'm happy with the overall structure so far. Input and fresh ideas are welcome.
There may be bidding theory evidence that those are excellent methods, but Im not smart enough to add that much complexity to defend against one bid that will not come up all that often. Partner and I play DONT against all natural 1NT and 2NT openings. Since a Big Club is often a balanced hand somewhere in the 14-20 range, using DONT against a Big Club often gets the defensive bid in before the 1NT bid. Our complete defense against artificial forcing 1♣, 1♦, and 1♥ openings (and conventional 1♦, 1♥, and 1♠ initial responses to same) is as follows:
Double: Sound (13-15 HCP or stronger) takeout for the doubled suit or a lower ranking suit.
1♦, 1♥, or 1♠ overcall: Sound opening bid with five or more cards in the overcalled suit.
1NT: Relay to 2♣ (same as a DONT double of 1NT) with an unspecified 6-card or longer suit.
All bids above 1NT: The same meaning, responses and rebids as with the partnerships DONT variant.
If your partnership uses a different defense to 1NT where the double is takeout of some sort, you can play the same system using your preferred defense to 1NT rather than DONT. Obviously, you cannot use a 1NT overcall as a substitute for a penalty double of a 1NT bid the opening side has not yet made.
This defense probably has significant theoretical flaws. It's principal virtues are (1) simplicity, (2) light memory load (adding only three calls to things already being remembered), and (3) it seems to actually work fairly well much of the time. The two-level two-suited overcalls are especially good at (a) competing for a partscore, (b) wrecking the 1♣ response and rebid structure, © stopping at a low level (where penalty doubles probably may not stick too much), (d) getting out of the auction before penalty doubles start flying around, and (e) offering a hint at an opening lead (the better to defend).
Brian Potter
e-mail: ClioBridgeGuy >at< att >dot< net
URL: Bridge at the Village
Bridge is more than just a card game. It is a cerebral sport. Bridge teaches you logic, reasoning, quick thinking, patience, concentration, and partnership skills.
- Martina Navratilova
#11
Posted 2011-November-06, 02:06
olien, on 2011-November-02, 21:58, said:
X = 5+♥
1♦ = 5+♠
1M = 3/4M and 5+m
1NT = 5+/4+ Majors
2♣ = natural or 5+♥ 5+m
2♦ = natural
2♥ = ♥ or ♠
2♠ = 5+♠ 5+m
2NT = 5+♦ 5+♣
3x = natural
I am happy with most of the structure, but I'm not sure about the 2♣ and 2♦ bids. The other idea I have for those bids is to play:
2♣ = ♣ or ♦
2♦ = 5+♥ 5+m
In the first structure, the 2♣ bid has ♣ 2/3 of the time and 5+♥ 5+♦ 1/3 of the time which may help partner in preempting the opponents, while the alternate structure its purely 50/50. The listed structure gives a definite cue bid over 2♦ with 3♦, but no worthwhile cue bid over 2♣. The alternate structure has a definite cue bid over 2♦ showing 5+♥ 5+m with 2♥ but allows partner to preempt more aggressively when he has a ♥ fit without knowledge of a minor suit fit; however, when we have a ♥ fit, the opponents may be able to just out-bid us in ♠. So, I'm not sure which is better, but I'm happy with the overall structure so far. Input and fresh ideas are welcome.
X = 5+♥
1♦ = 5+♠
I am sorry but this is terrible. You are giving the big clubbesr so many more options. I loved it when I played Moscito and opps used methods like this.
Why not keep it simple, x = Majors, 1NT = minors, every thing else natural. Toss in a Wilkosz 2D overcall if you want, but that's it imo.
#12
Posted 2011-November-07, 12:01
I'd much rather see (from the strong club side) ambiguous defences, where fourth-hand needs two suits to get to the 3 level before I get a chance to come in. But if 1♥ and 1♠ are useless overcalls from a disruption perspective, yeah, switch back to 1♥ shows ♥...
#13
Posted 2011-November-07, 22:24
And also with pass, Mike. In fact you can penalise the opponents far more easily.
The concept is similar to that very silly idea of transfer pre empts which had some fleeting, (very), popularity until people realised what a poor method this really was.
Consider:
(3D) now I have x and 3H for different hands as well as this auction - (3D) P (3H) P (P) x as a penalty double.
However I guess we should be encouraging, not discouraging players to use inferior methods.
#14
Posted 2011-November-08, 03:31
the hog, on 2011-November-07, 22:24, said:
And also with pass, Mike. In fact you can penalise the opponents far more easily.
The concept is similar to that very silly idea of transfer pre empts which had some fleeting, (very), popularity until people realised what a poor method this really was.
Consider:
(3D) now I have x and 3H for different hands as well as this auction - (3D) P (3H) P (P) x as a penalty double.
However I guess we should be encouraging, not discouraging players to use inferior methods.
Out of curiosity, what do you use Dbl and 1♦ for after a strong 1♣ opening?
#15
Posted 2011-November-08, 04:13
#16
Posted 2011-November-08, 13:30
the hog, on 2011-November-07, 22:24, said:
And also with pass, Michael. In fact you can penalise the opponents far more easily.
The concept is similar to that very silly idea of transfer pre empts which had some fleeting, (very), popularity until people realised what a poor method this really was.
And I meant "options for responder after an overcall of X or 1♦". Yes, that includes a forcing pass. I know all of that. But when fourth-hand's bid is 2♥ or 3♥, it doesn't much matter if partner's shown 0-7 or 5-bad 8 or 0-4, it's still ugly (yes, you get the "we have no game, let's just take our plus", but I have that over 1♥, too). It also (if you do it differently) isn't a big deal if partner's shown clubs or diamonds, when they have to start the 3NT investigation at the 3 level.
Sure, 1♥ NAT is better than X = hearts. But, like the multi 2♦, if the combination of "lose on the single-suited hearts" and "win when I bid 1♥ on hands that have no descriptive bid in the other system" is plus over natural, then it's plus over natural. And the "3/4M, 5+lower" is a very useful tool for a partscore battle, indeed (especially when you pick off the major).
Having said all of that, I play double as "clubs, able to be led to" and 1♦ as "diamonds, able to be led to". A real danger of a strong club opening is that standard bidders get to 3NT and it's a blind lead, whereas the clubbers allow the danger suit to be pinpointed.
#17
Posted 2011-November-08, 13:32
#18
Posted 2011-November-08, 17:58
Free, on 2011-November-08, 03:31, said:
x = Majors, 1D = nat, lead directing, 1NT = minors.
#19
Posted 2011-November-08, 23:30
2♣ = diamonds or Mm two suiter
2♦ = hearts
2♥ = both M
2♠ = spades
2NT = clubs
3♣ = both minors
The duplicative bids at the two level have more playing strength.
I don't have enough experience with this yet to decide whether it's worth keeping.
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#20
Posted 2011-November-10, 21:20
blackshoe, on 2011-November-08, 23:30, said:
Maybe in the US. Not here.