canape preempts? weak twos
#1
Posted 2011-December-14, 17:28
2m 4+ that minor, 5+ in a major
2M 4+ in that major, 5+ in a minor
I'm unsure whether it would be better to have these show exactly 4 cards in the suit opened vs 4+ cards and a longer higher suit. It seems in particular that the 2m preempts would be hard to defend since having takeout shape for a double is going to be pretty unlikely with opener having a 5 card major.
#2
Posted 2011-December-14, 18:00
#3
Posted 2011-December-14, 18:33
#4
Posted 2011-December-14, 18:40
straube, on 2011-December-14, 18:33, said:
Yeah, it's possible the 2M versions aren't nearly as good as the 2m ones, I just threw them both out there for consideration without tons of thought. There's overlap with the 5M/5m hands, so that's probably a bad sign. It's possible one might want to play the 2m ones as canape 2-suiters, but 2M as natural weak twos or something else weird (2H majors, 2S bad minor preempt?).
#5
Posted 2011-December-14, 20:00
I mean, if advancer has 5215 and hears 2D, he'll probably sit if pd advertises 4M/5D (even though a 9-cd spade fit is possible) but he'll remove if pd has 5M/4D.
#6
Posted 2011-December-14, 22:24
straube, on 2011-December-14, 20:00, said:
I mean, if advancer has 5215 and hears 2D, he'll probably sit if pd advertises 4M/5D (even though a 9-cd spade fit is possible) but he'll remove if pd has 5M/4D.
I think it's actually going to be worse for fit-finding to have the known, cheaper suit be the shorter one. Figure that opposite 4D/5M it's most likely you belong in the major, so what do this mean? First, it means responder is going to be correcting a lot, which is generally bad since it gives the defense two bites at the apple. Second, the longer suit is unknown, which means that responder may want to take a chance to improve the contract by correcting since he only needs 33(4=3m) shape to think that correcting is better, maybe even (32)(5=3m) is still worth it if you'd rather play the 5-2 2M contract over the 4-3 minor and it's certainly going to be right when it's a 5-3 fit you find. In short, it seems like if you respond conservatively to just find the best fit, I think you're going to bid 2M as pass/correct a lot and sometimes have to recorrect back to 3m which is clearly unfortunate.
All that said, I think IF responder was willing to pass a lot these canape preempts would be quite difficult to defend. I guess in some way, it's almost like playing both 2♣ and 2♦ as "multi" with a 5cM, but you bid your better minor so partner can pass if he wants.
#7
Posted 2011-December-15, 03:40
#8
Posted 2011-December-15, 04:10
rbforster, on 2011-December-14, 17:28, said:
2m 4+ that minor, 5+ in a major
2M 4+ in that major, 5+ in a minor
I'm unsure whether it would be better to have these show exactly 4 cards in the suit opened vs 4+ cards and a longer higher suit. It seems in particular that the 2m preempts would be hard to defend since having takeout shape for a double is going to be pretty unlikely with opener having a 5 card major.
I believe that this idea is certainly worth some deeper analysis. Compare -
1.) This suggested opening (4 cards in that minor and a 5 card major), to
2.) Muiderberg (5 cards in that major and 4(5) cards in a minor
When responder sees a looming misfit the hand probably belongs to the opponents. You can bail out sooner. On the other hand I would like to know what your suggested continuation bidding structure looks like when a fit is known (found) e.g. Getting the weaker hand on table as dummy.
#9
Posted 2011-December-15, 17:25
32519, on 2011-December-15, 04:10, said:
1.) This suggested opening (4 cards in that minor and a 5 card major), to
2.) Muiderberg (5 cards in that major and 4(5) cards in a minor
When responder sees a looming misfit the hand probably belongs to the opponents. You can bail out sooner.
Certainly showing 4(5) minor cards and 5+ major cards has to be safer opening the hand 2m vs 2M. I'm less clear whether this makes it a more effective preempt (since responder may quite often correct to 2M and that puts you back in a similar situation as Muiderberg). However, if you think the Muiderberg M+m hands are worth opening preemptively, this might give you a way to open these hands with your 2m openers while still having a natural 6+ weak two for 2M.
Quote
So I normally play 5+m/4+M for my 2m openers, but I don't think the basic responses would need to be that different. We play:
2♣ weak two with ♣ + Major
2♦ relay, usually invitational. Opener bids his other major (which can be passed), after which 2N invites.
---> 2C-2D-2OM-2N: 3♣ min (NF), 3♦+ max with shape relays for the 2 suit lengths
2M pass or correct
2N GF relay. 3♣ spades, 3♦ hearts (transfer), 3OM 6M-4m, 3N+ extreme shapes
3♣ preemptive raise
3♦ GF natural
3M pass or correct
4♣ preemptive raise
3N, 4M to play
2♦ weak two with ♦ + Major
2M pass or correct
2N invite relay. 3♣ = hearts min, 3♦ spades min, 3M that major max (or maybe opposite major?)
3♣ GF relay. 3♦ = hearts (transfer), 3♥ = spades (transfer), 3♠+ extreme shapes
3,4♦ preemptive
3M pass or correct
4♣ GF natural
3N, 4M to play
#10
Posted 2011-December-15, 17:48
#11
Posted 2011-December-15, 18:18
2♦ showed 4+ Diamonds and 4+ cards in either major
2♥ showed 4+ hearts and (4+ spades or 5+ clubs)
2♠ showed either 4+ spades and 5+ clubs OR 6+ spades
I thought that it worked pretty well
#12
Posted 2011-December-16, 00:24
the hog, on 2011-December-15, 17:48, said:
I'm not sure I want to do this. However, in terms of advantages, it occurs to me that:
1. 2-suited preempts are often "safer" than 1-suited ones, which is good (statistically you get more law level fits)
2. 2-suited preempts are equally or more frequent than 1-suiters (by about 2x for the 4+m/5+M shapes compared to a weak two)
3. 2-suited preempts, especially ones with an unknown major, can be hard to defend against
Of course arguments #1 & #2 have nothing in particular to do with a canape preempting style, as opposed to my current style or Muiderberg where you open in your longer suit.
That said, most defensive bidding methods over preempts tend to assume the bid suit is the long/anchor suit and are aimed at finding fits in the unbid major(s). This means that if people use standard methods to defend against your canape preempts, they probably will have some hard bidding problems - isn't that the point of preempts? Alternatively, if they want to use a better defense, they're going to be facing a "Multi" type problem where there's a long unknown major that complicates their takeout methods and would involve quite detailed methods to handle decently. In addition, responder is a lot more able to pass the natural minor openings than he would over 2♦ multi having his own long suit. I would judge that something like this is intermediate in difficulty for the defense between a normal 2♦ Multi and a non-forcing 2♥ Multi. Either is going to be hard.
#13
Posted 2011-December-16, 11:59
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#14
Posted 2011-December-16, 14:17
awm, on 2011-December-16, 11:59, said:
I think that's a great point. It's important to be able to further the preempt.
#15
Posted 2011-December-20, 03:03
2m = weak with 4(+) cards in the minor, 5 cards in one of the majors OR minimum opening bid, single suited in the minor opened
2M = natural & weak
2NT = either 14-15 (ish) with long diamonds or a good 3M opening
(their card is at http://www.bridgeweb...ersonCrouch.pdf )
I don't know how well these pre-empts actually work... the 2m opening only came up once against us and they bid to 4S and went off on a bad trump break.
We agreed to treat the 2m opening more like a multi than weak with the minor opened (i.e. double balanced-ish)