Real Diamond Precision A system for the new Precisionista
#1
Posted 2011-November-17, 02:11
The openings:
Of course, 1♣ is 16+ (17+ if balanced).
1♦ is the key system bid: 10-15, four+ diamonds, not balanced. It will be five+ unless .holding 4-4-4-1 or a five-card club suit.
1♥: 10-15, five+ hearts, not balanced. May be 4=4=1=4 exactly (rare).
1♠: 10-15, five+ spades, not balanced.
1NT: 13-16, balanced (4-3-3-3, 4-4-3-2, or 5-3-3-2). Open 1NT with a five-card major unless the suit is so strong you are willing to treat it as a six-carder.
2♣: 10-15, six+ clubs or five+ clubs and a four-card major.
2♦: 10-15, four spades and five hearts, insufficient playing strength for a reverse, no void. (see below before you F******y-haters comment).
2NT: 21-22 balanced.
Other openings to taste.
The openings above are designed to be 100% ACBL GCC-legal. For ACBL Mid-chart games, or most any game in the more enlightened jurisdictions, use Kaplan Inversion in response to 1♥ and fold the F******y hands back into 1♥, freeing 2♦ to be used as desired.
Using this structure, your opening natural suit bids are guaranteed not balanced and show a real suit. The rebid of a new suit is always four+ cards. Opener's no trump rebids can be used artificially to solve various problems.. More details later, or devise your own uses.
The shape guarantees do not apply to tactical third- and fourth-hand openers.
Pros (vs. other Precision methods):
Excellent definition of shape.
No nebulous 1♦ begging to be preempted. Accurate 1♦ sequences, even in competition.
Cons:
You have to pass balanced 12's in first and second seats. (I don't mind this a bit, others will find this a fatal flaw.)
2♣ is harder to handle when you don't guarantee six.
#2
Posted 2011-November-17, 02:30
#3
Posted 2011-November-17, 03:19
http://www.bridgebas...new-crazy-idea/
2♣ with 54 or 6 is a little bit clumsy and 13-16 is quite clumsy. Why not just play 12-14 and 15+ strong club? of course then you will have problems with 1♣. It's give and take but passing 12 is scary and having a 4-point NT range is also bad.
This post has been edited by gwnn: 2011-November-17, 03:22
George Carlin
#4
Posted 2011-November-17, 03:24
You can solve this quite easily: make sure your NT range is similar to the limited openings. Make your 1♣ opening 16+ all the time and you can switch to a 12-15 1NT opening. Make it 15+ (even better imo) and you can play 12-14 or 11-14 or 11+-14 (whatever you prefer).
Note: I don't know anything about ACBL system regulations except that they suck. So don't blame me for suggesting something which isn't allowed.
#5
Posted 2011-November-17, 04:17
Free, on 2011-November-17, 03:24, said:
You can solve this quite easily: make sure your NT range is similar to the limited openings. Make your 1♣ opening 16+ all the time and you can switch to a 12-15 1NT opening. Make it 15+ (even better imo) and you can play 12-14 or 11-14 or 11+-14 (whatever you prefer).
Note: I don't know anything about ACBL system regulations except that they suck. So don't blame me for suggesting something which isn't allowed.
The NT range modifications can easily be done and many will prefer this. By the way, we do upgrade freely, so we will open many 12's but I personally dislike opening all flat 12's. Your mileage may vary.
Zelandakh, on 2011-November-17, 02:30, said:
No blame to anyone for not knowing ACBL regs, no one does (especially ACBL itself). but the consensus seems to be that opening 1NT with a singleton by partnership agreement is not allowed (it's OK as bridge judgement if rare). In the rest of the world, you are quite correct.
#6
Posted 2011-November-17, 04:29
gwnn, on 2011-November-17, 03:19, said:
http://www.bridgebas...new-crazy-idea/
2♣ with 54 or 6 is a little bit clumsy and 13-16 is quite clumsy. Why not just play 12-14 and 15+ strong club? of course then you will have problems with 1♣. It's give and take but passing 12 is scary and having a 4-point NT range is also bad.
You have some good points, but awm club won't be allowed in ACBL: the 1♥ transfer opening is illegal even at the Mid-chart level. It is legal on the Super Chart, but there are virtually no Super Chart events in North America If you aren't good enough for the Vanderbilt or the Spingold.
#7
Posted 2011-November-17, 06:03
I assume you know the symmetric relay opening structure (e.g.):
1♣=15+
1♦=unbalanced, none of the below (two or three suited without a 5cM, 0+♦)
1♥=natural
1♠=natural
1NT=12-14
2♣=6+ (no 4cM, maybe 4 cards in ♦)
2♦=6+ (no 4cM, maybe 4 cards in ♣)
of course this is quite the opposite of 1♦ promising 4 and usually 5, but in practice you can show both your suits by the secound round of the auction, even if it gets competitive.
George Carlin
#9
Posted 2011-November-17, 10:47
gwnn, on 2011-November-17, 06:03, said:
I assume you know the symmetric relay opening structure (e.g.):
1♣=15+
1♦=unbalanced, none of the below (two or three suited without a 5cM, 0+♦)
1♥=natural
1♠=natural
1NT=12-14
2♣=6+ (no 4cM, maybe 4 cards in ♦)
2♦=6+ (no 4cM, maybe 4 cards in ♣)
of course this is quite the opposite of 1♦ promising 4 and usually 5, but in practice you can show both your suits by the secound round of the auction, even if it gets competitive.
Pard and I play the above structure except that our NT opening is 14-16.
#10
Posted 2011-November-17, 10:50
George Carlin
#11
Posted 2011-November-17, 11:07
gwnn, on 2011-November-17, 10:50, said:
Yes, good catch -- our 1♦ can indeed include 11 - 13 bal. In your experience, does removing balanced hands from the opening confer an advantage?
#12
Posted 2011-November-17, 12:33
akhare, on 2011-November-17, 11:07, said:
Of course having a more specific 1♦ opener is going to be better than 2+, the question is what are you doing with the balanced hands? Passing 0-13 balanced seems super conservative, opening 4 card majors on balanced hands doesn't seem so good, and so that leaves either dropping your strong club from 17+ to 15+ and playing one NT range, or playing 2 ranges with a 2+ diamond opener. I feel like either of the latter options is playable, not sure which I would prefer.
#13
Posted 2011-November-17, 12:54
George Carlin
#14
Posted 2011-November-17, 18:16
mikestar13, on 2011-November-17, 02:11, said:
The openings:
Of course, 1♣ is 16+ (17+ if balanced).
1♦ is the key system bid: 10-15, four+ diamonds, not balanced. It will be five+ unless .holding 4-4-4-1 or a five-card club suit.
1♥: 10-15, five+ hearts, not balanced. May be 4=4=1=4 exactly (rare).
1♠: 10-15, five+ spades, not balanced.
1NT: 13-16, balanced (4-3-3-3, 4-4-3-2, or 5-3-3-2). Open 1NT with a five-card major unless the suit is so strong you are willing to treat it as a six-carder.
2♣: 10-15, six+ clubs or five+ clubs and a four-card major.
2♦: 10-15, four spades and five hearts, insufficient playing strength for a reverse, no void. (see below before you F******y-haters comment).
2NT: 21-22 balanced.
Other openings to taste.
The openings above are designed to be 100% ACBL GCC-legal. For ACBL Mid-chart games, or most any game in the more enlightened jurisdictions, use Kaplan Inversion in response to 1♥ and fold the F******y hands back into 1♥, freeing 2♦ to be used as desired.
Using this structure, your opening natural suit bids are guaranteed not balanced and show a real suit. The rebid of a new suit is always four+ cards. Opener's no trump rebids can be used artificially to solve various problems.. More details later, or devise your own uses.
The shape guarantees do not apply to tactical third- and fourth-hand openers.
Pros (vs. other Precision methods):
Excellent definition of shape.
No nebulous 1♦ begging to be preempted. Accurate 1♦ sequences, even in competition.
Cons:
You have to pass balanced 12's in first and second seats. (I don't mind this a bit, others will find this a fatal flaw.)
2♣ is harder to handle when you don't guarantee six.
Why don't you tally your openings for say a few hundred hands and let us know what the percentages are for your openings? It's really useful to post that information whenever looking for feedback on new openings. Offhand, I'd guess something like...
P-60%
1C-14%
1D-4%
1H-3%
1S-3%
1N-13%
etc
and if so, you're putting too much pressure on your Pass and your 1N and not enough on your 1D. No doubt you'll have some advantage when you open 1D, but can it really make up for your other losses? a 4-pt NT range? passing 11-12 pt balanced hands? burying 5-cd majors in 1N when you are too weak to uncover them in competition?
Besides this, opening 2C with what could be Axxx AQx x Jxxxx is a problem...as is opening 1H with 4414. Opening 2D Flannery looks wrong because the first two available responses are sign offs when they really ought to be forcing bids; 2D as Flannery handles too few hand types and is a wasteful use of this opening.
#15
Posted 2011-November-17, 19:35
straube, on 2011-November-17, 18:16, said:
Besides this, opening 2C with what could be Axxx AQx x Jxxxx is a problem...as is opening 1H with 4414. Opening 2D Flannery looks wrong because the first two available responses are sign offs when they really ought to be forcing bids; 2D as Flannery handles too few hand types and is a wasteful use of this opening.
Point well taken some research is needed. But the 2♦ Flannery is only for ACBL General Chart games, I don't actually like it. And in those games the (admittedly non-trivial) cost is the natural weak 2♦ Most of interesting uses (Multi, etc.) are disallowed anyway.
#16
Posted 2011-November-17, 19:41
gwnn, on 2011-November-17, 06:03, said:
I assume you know the symmetric relay opening structure (e.g.):
1♣=15+
1♦=unbalanced, none of the below (two or three suited without a 5cM, 0+♦)
1♥=natural
1♠=natural
1NT=12-14
2♣=6+ (no 4cM, maybe 4 cards in ♦)
2♦=6+ (no 4cM, maybe 4 cards in ♣)
of course this is quite the opposite of 1♦ promising 4 and usually 5, but in practice you can show both your suits by the secound round of the auction, even if it gets competitive.
This is actually quite good, but others can present this better than I, as they have more experience with it. I'm presenting what has worked for me. Suggested modifications are welcome.
#17
Posted 2011-November-18, 10:33
mikestar13, on 2011-November-17, 19:41, said:
In that case, +1 for what Gwnn suggested .
As other have noted:
- You don't P as often
- You get to open the 11/12 bal hands
- Responder is better placed after a 2♣ opening
- The 1♦ opening is more nebulous, but it's limited to 5♦ and pays back with the ability to use 1♦ - 1♥ - 2♦ as a good raise and 1♦ - 1♥ - 2♥ as a bad raise
- There's no 13-16 NT range (a tighter 14-16 with an upgrade to 1♣ when in doubt works better IMO
- The 2♦ opening is arguably a better use for the opening
The above has worked very well for pard and I...
#18
Posted 2011-November-18, 10:47
George Carlin
#19
Posted 2011-November-18, 11:28
gwnn, on 2011-November-18, 10:47, said:
When you respond 1M does that deny a GF hand? Is it forcing? What is opener's rebid after 1D-1H with x Axx Kxxxx Axxx ?
#20
Posted 2011-November-18, 11:32
straube, on 2011-November-18, 11:28, said:
The way we played it yes but I'm pretty sure it's not needed. And we used to rebid 1N with that hand (both minors).
Basically I really like the opening structure and I don't mind any reasonable continuations. It was cool that this way opener could usually show both suits by his second turn (5m4M is by far the most common hand type in 1♦).
George Carlin