How do you seperate responders 5 and 6 card major suits?
#1
Posted 2011-November-21, 23:53
So a really fundamental question:
Twice in a recent club night partner opened 1 of a minor when I was very weak (5 and 7 HCP respectively) with a 6 card major and no fit in the minor. Obviously this rates some sort of bid, so both times I bid 1 of the major. Opener has then bid the other major or 1NT (and I have an unbalanced hand and/or no tolerance for his major), and I want to rebid my major to communicate my extra length.
The problem we are having is that partner isn't sure if he should pull or bid a new suit on the basis of having a decent balanced hand and wanting to play somewhere else rather than a 5-2 fit, or if I have a six card suit and therefore 2 of the major rates to be a better place to play.
What agreements do people have for dealing with that situation? If I'm weak do I just rebid my major to declare that I'm willing to play there? Is it always 6, a good 5 or stuck for another bid?
#2
Posted 2011-November-22, 00:39
1S-2H shows six of them. Partner shouldn't fret about a misfit and should pass minimum hands.
1m-1H
1N-2H is to play. Maybe you have five of them, maybe more. Partner's thinking is over with. If he is in the habit of rebidding 1NT with a stiff heart, he might rethink that idea and prepare his original opening bid so he won't feel the need to do so.
If it goes:
1m-1H
1S and you have 5 hearts, rebid 1NT unless you seriously fit his minor. If your stopper is shaky or non-existent in the unbid suit, just do it anyway.
#3
Posted 2011-November-22, 01:51
Aguahombre has it right (as he usually does). To expand on his response. If you have a hand that doesn't want to get passed in 2H (in either of those auctions) bid the unbid minor at the 2 level. Most people play this as artificial and forcing and just asks partner to describe his hand further (such as bidding 2H with 3 hearts).
For example.
1C-1H
1S-2D (people play this as either artificial and game forcing, or just forcing for 1 round)
1C-1H
1N-2D (people tend to play this as artificial and game forcing, or just forcing for 1 round).
So if you just rebid 2H or 1N in either of these auctions, partner should not be scared that you have too much to pass you. Furthermore, the bid of 2H is a "leave me here p!" bid. The bid announces that unless he has a good reason to pull it (such as
1C-1H
2S-2H if he has 6-5 in the black suits) he should just pass and let you play.
Never tell the same lie twice. - Elim Garek on the real moral of "The boy who cried wolf"
#4
Posted 2011-November-22, 02:18
George Carlin
#5
Posted 2011-November-22, 02:21
George Carlin
#6
Posted 2011-November-22, 02:54
gwnn, on 2011-November-22, 02:21, said:
It shows 6 hearts. I will explain that I missorted.
#7
Posted 2011-November-22, 08:51
I thought it should be something like that, thanks for the thoughts. I might agree that a very good five is worth a rebid to prevent having to missort my cards.
#8
Posted 2011-November-22, 09:09
Playing 2/1 GF and strong jump shifts seem to collide. I´d recomed you just forget that jump shifts exist and just bid without using them, you will improve faster.
#9
Posted 2011-November-22, 09:42
Cthulhu D, on 2011-November-21, 23:53, said:
Tangential comment...I at first laughed at the seeming silliness of "two inexperienced players, he's used to A, I'm used to B, so we decided to play C."
But with a little reflection, I think that approach might be quite wise...good luck to you.
#10
Posted 2011-November-22, 16:36
bd71, on 2011-November-22, 09:42, said:
But with a little reflection, I think that approach might be quite wise...good luck to you.
Yeah, we both haven't played for a long time either, so starting with a clean sheet and no presumptions on either side made sense to me.
Quote
Amusingly a strong jump shift has never come up - I'm aware of the problem (if 1H - 2C is game forcing, we need 3C for a an invite with good clubs). So we're only playing strong jump shifts with very strong hands to a suit infront of the suit partner opened (1H-2S).