We were playing Acol (4 card majors, weak NT) in a teams match. Could we have avoided 6♠, and should we want to?
Could we have avoided this slam? ATB?
#1
Posted 2012-January-29, 14:45
We were playing Acol (4 card majors, weak NT) in a teams match. Could we have avoided 6♠, and should we want to?
#2
Posted 2012-January-29, 14:54
#4
Posted 2012-January-29, 15:34
Quartic, on 2012-January-29, 15:14, said:
Many bid the pre-empt here with hands that my partnership considers to be too strong. We are certainly off a at least 2 of the ♥A, ♣K or a trump trick making this an auto pass.
Consider some kind of Bergen and/or Jacoby 2nt so you don't have to "pre-empt" yourselves with hands this good.
What is baby oil made of?
#5
Posted 2012-January-29, 18:05
#6
Posted 2012-January-29, 18:35
you've got 5 and a half losers for partner to cover with a pre-empt
#7
Posted 2012-February-05, 16:53
What I would bid over partner's 1S I'm not sure. 2NT would show a balanced 17-19 but not sure if it is GF and gets across my Spades. As its teams I think I would just bid 4S and probably regret a missing slam at my leisure.
Regards,
Simon
#8
Posted 2012-February-05, 17:30
SimonFa, on 2012-February-05, 16:53, said:
What I would bid over partner's 1S I'm not sure. 2NT would show a balanced 17-19 but not sure if it is GF and gets across my Spades. As its teams I think I would just bid 4S and probably regret a missing slam at my leisure.
Regards,
Simon
Actually we play a wide ranging 1NT rebid (15-18), so for us 2NT is always game forcing (could be semi-balanced). It would usually deny 4 spades though, so I wouldn't choose it at the table. We don't have a way to show a 4 card major if we open a 4 card minor and rebid 1NT or 2NT, so we always open the major, though I can see the attraction of opening the minor on hands like these.
#10
Posted 2012-February-05, 18:33
wank, on 2012-February-05, 18:12, said:
I've never had a problem playing it - we already have information about both hands, and we use a 2♣ bid to ask for more information about opener's shape and strength. The only thing we lose is the ability to play 2♣, which isn't often that useful anyway.
#11
Posted 2012-February-05, 19:35
I don't care for the preemptive 4♠ here with this poor distribution. I guess I can bid a limit raise with my really good trump as 2♠ seems cautious. After 1♠-3♠limit then opener can flash a slam signal with 4♣ and responder with nothing to cue and a minimum limit raise simply responds 4♠ ending the auction.
.. neilkaz ..
#12
Posted 2012-February-07, 08:58
Given the bal. nature of responders hand, selling the hand as a limit raise
10-12 with 4 card support is sufficient.
My Acol days are long gone, but 4S was a 2-way bid, and in nature preemptive,
and the responding hand is not shapely enough for the bid to be preemptive.
Responder is also not strong enough to make game a sure thing.
Over 3S, opener can and should make a move with 4C, responder will deny any
cue bid with 4S, suggesting good trumps, or if we wants to show some live
he can make a quantitative move with 5S, or go all the way to 6S.
If you reached the slam after a limit raise, I could live with any of the
scetched auctions.
The auctions reaching 6S may be overly optimistic, but so what.
With kind regards
Marlowe
PS: If 4S is preemptive - Pass is clear cut.
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#13
Posted 2012-February-07, 09:04
The east hand is ok for 4S, but it is definitely a maximum. The lack of defensive strength makes it ok for a preempt imo.
#14
Posted 2012-February-07, 17:03
Quartic, on 2012-January-29, 15:14, said:
In traditional acol you invent a suit if you have to and delayed game raise if a little better and want to GF.
If you play a wide range 1N rebid, I'd recommend opening the minor on a big hand like this, and using 1♦-1♠-3N for a 4432 19 with support. We used to do this till we tweaked our system a bit, but still open minors. Now we just agree we don't get dealt 19 counts and bid them as 18s (as I'd do with this) or 20s.