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Weirdest/worst agreements you've encountered at the table?

#61 User is offline   RunemPard 

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Posted 2012-August-28, 01:33

 Phil, on 2012-August-27, 16:20, said:

Maybe someday they will make this legal.

I've made my 3rd request this week. Fingers crossed.



I don't understand why this is not allowed? So you can open 3NT to show a long strong minor, but not 3NT to show a stronger hand with a good major?
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#62 User is offline   RunemPard 

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Posted 2012-August-28, 01:42

 Bbradley62, on 2012-August-27, 19:02, said:

Does anyone play "steps" any more over 2 opening? 2=0-3HCP, regardless of shape; 2=4-6, etc.


I play this with my novice partner at our club...
All it does is force me to bid to the 3 level at times and wrong side my major contracts...
Control responses are ok as well, but I prefer relay w/ nothing special and good values to show a bid.
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#63 User is offline   Vampyr 

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Posted 2012-August-28, 03:36

 JLOGIC, on 2012-August-27, 16:18, said:

Agree, but playing it in reverse where 4m= 4m preempt, and 3N=good 4M bid (whatever you'd open namyats 4C/4D with) is quite good I think. Better than gambling 3N anyways.



 Phil, on 2012-August-27, 16:20, said:

Maybe someday they will make this legal.

I've made my 3rd request this week. Fingers crossed.



 RunemPard, on 2012-August-28, 01:33, said:

I don't understand why this is not allowed? So you can open 3NT to show a long strong minor, but not 3NT to show a stronger hand with a good major?


Is this definitely illegal in the ACBL -- you can open 3NT with a solid minor but not a major? Maybe it should not be a big surprise, since the ACBL seems to have some really arbitrary regulations -- such as, you can bid 1M-2 as clubs or a raise or as just a raise, only if you are a passed hand.
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#64 User is offline   campboy 

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Posted 2012-August-28, 04:09

 Vampyr, on 2012-August-28, 03:36, said:

Is this definitely illegal in the ACBL -- you can open 3NT with a solid minor but not a major? Maybe it should not be a big surprise, since the ACBL seems to have some really arbitrary regulations -- such as, you can bid 1M-2 as clubs or a raise or as just a raise, only if you are a passed hand.

At GCC if a solid suit is guaranteed that is always ok; if the suit might not be solid it has to be a minor.
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#65 User is offline   blackshoe 

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Posted 2012-August-28, 09:03

 Bbradley62, on 2012-August-27, 19:02, said:

Does anyone play "steps" any more over 2 opening? 2=0-3HCP, regardless of shape; 2=4-6, etc.

I've seen one pair do this in the last couple of years. They're not novices, but close.
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#66 User is offline   jeffford76 

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Posted 2012-August-28, 09:46

 RunemPard, on 2012-August-28, 01:33, said:

I don't understand why this is not allowed?


Because the convention charts in the ACBL aren't based on logic, they're based on what people have historically played, and what methods people have applied to get added.
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#67 User is offline   Quantumcat 

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Posted 2012-August-28, 18:37

How likely is it that when you apply to get a method added, they allow it? My partner and I would love to have a holiday in America and play all the events for a year but not being allowed to play our system which has been carefully crafted over some years is really putting us off.

By the way is there a calendar on the ACBL website or elsewhere that shows which events use which convention chart?
I Transfers
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#68 User is offline   Mbodell 

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Posted 2012-August-28, 23:39

 Quantumcat, on 2012-August-28, 18:37, said:

How likely is it that when you apply to get a method added, they allow it? My partner and I would love to have a holiday in America and play all the events for a year but not being allowed to play our system which has been carefully crafted over some years is really putting us off.

By the way is there a calendar on the ACBL website or elsewhere that shows which events use which convention chart?


How likely that they would add something? Very, very small. Note that what is on the charts is important, and sets policy for many national/regional/sectionals, but that people are free to overrule the charts at the club and district level (and do) and that directors don't always rule consistently on what is allowed and what isn't. In some clubs, you could play nearly anything. In others, it would be just GCC (and even some GCC bids might get ruled "bad").
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#69 User is offline   FrancesHinden 

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Posted 2012-August-29, 01:39

 akwoo, on 2012-August-27, 18:56, said:

And my entry to this:

I recently saw transfers as immediate responses to strong 2. Thinking about it, it's not completely terrible; presumably opener makes the expected bid with a balanced hand and breaks the transfer with an unbalanced one. The only drawback is that responder now has to bid 2 with a weak hand and no 5 card suit.


I play transfer responses to a strong 2C opening: 2NT = clubs, 3C = diamonds, 3D = 6 hearts to 3 of the top 5 honours, nothing outside, 3H = same in spades, 3S = 5-5 majors 4-8 HCP. There's a huge amount of merit to this.
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#70 User is offline   FrancesHinden 

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Posted 2012-August-29, 01:41

 Quantumcat, on 2012-August-27, 17:28, said:

Wouldn't you be less likely to want to play in 3NT when partner has an eight-card major than when he has an eight-card minor?


Yes.
But in general you don't want partner to play in 3NT when partner has either an 8-card major or an 8-card minor, you want to declarer 3NT.
The 3NT opening with a long major (which I play, subject to fairly strict rules about exactly what it shows) is a way of describing a particular hand type precisely whilst also having some pre-emptive effect. It is not intended to play in 3NT.
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#71 User is offline   squealydan 

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Posted 2012-August-29, 02:35

 FrancesHinden, on 2012-August-29, 01:39, said:

I play transfer responses to a strong 2C opening: 2NT = clubs, 3C = diamonds, 3D = 6 hearts to 3 of the top 5 honours, nothing outside, 3H = same in spades, 3S = 5-5 majors 4-8 HCP. There's a huge amount of merit to this.


I like this! Can you tell me what the immediate 2-level responses mean in this system?
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#72 User is offline   bluecalm 

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Posted 2012-August-29, 03:34

Quote

Agree, but playing it in reverse where 4m= 4m preempt, and 3N=good 4M bid (whatever you'd open namyats 4C/4D with) is quite good I think. Better than gambling 3N anyways.


I don't doubt that it's better than gambling but I think gambling is a good convention in a sense that on suitable hands opening 3N is better than other options.
It's very rare though.
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#73 User is offline   gwnn 

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Posted 2012-August-29, 04:03

BTW Fred advocated a very strongly modified steps-based response structure:

2D=waiting (so based on the below, it will often be 3-7 balanced)
2H=I will pass 2NT if you rebid it (basically 0-2 balanced)
2S=8-10 balanced

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#74 User is offline   Kungsgeten 

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Posted 2012-August-29, 05:41

About a month ago I played at the Swedish Bridge Festival, where this bidding came up:

1-(2*)

Most pairs in Sweden (that I know of) plays this as 5-5 in hearts and a minor. I had 8 hearts in a weak hand, so I asked what 2 meant: "16+ hcp". After some further questions, they had convinced me that 2 really showed 16+ hcp, any distribution. I chose to pass and LHO bid 3. RHO now bid 5. I asked what 3 meant: "It shows clubs". Then I asked what 2NT would have meant "It would have shown NT". Jaw dropped.

The spectacle ended when my partner doubled 5, and I chose to pull it to 5, going down. My partner held 3 aces and nothing more :(
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#75 User is offline   squealydan 

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Posted 2012-August-29, 06:54

 Kungsgeten, on 2012-August-29, 05:41, said:

About a month ago I played at the Swedish Bridge Festival, where this bidding came up:

1-(2*)

Most pairs in Sweden (that I know of) plays this as 5-5 in hearts and a minor. I had 8 hearts in a weak hand, so I asked what 2 meant: "16+ hcp". After some further questions, they had convinced me that 2 really showed 16+ hcp, any distribution. I chose to pass and LHO bid 3. RHO now bid 5. I asked what 3 meant: "It shows clubs". Then I asked what 2NT would have meant "It would have shown NT". Jaw dropped.

The spectacle ended when my partner doubled 5, and I chose to pull it to 5, going down. My partner held 3 aces and nothing more :(


I'd say 75% or more of low-level players at my club play an immediate cue-bid as showing some strong hand. The minimum point count probably varies between 16 and 18. I would be surprised if more than a few have discussed what subsequent bidding should mean and I very much doubt any of them have a way for responder to show a bust hand.

What's worse, many of them are still playing strong jump overcalls, and although not explicitly stated, many also are happy to double "to show an opening hand" even though if asked they would call the bids "take-out doubles". (Coming up through the grades, so many of my top boards resulted in a post-hand inquest with one opponent saying to the other "But I had to double, I had 13 points!")

Just to round out the options, a few even play 2NT overcalls as balanced 20-22! In addition to all the above. So they have a huge armoury of available overcalls for those few occasions when they have a decent hand and an opponent happens to beat them to the opening bid.
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#76 User is offline   RunemPard 

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Posted 2012-August-29, 08:54

 squealydan, on 2012-August-29, 06:54, said:

I'd say 75% or more of low-level players at my club play an immediate cue-bid as showing some strong hand. The minimum point count probably varies between 16 and 18. I would be surprised if more than a few have discussed what subsequent bidding should mean and I very much doubt any of them have a way for responder to show a bust hand.

What's worse, many of them are still playing strong jump overcalls, and although not explicitly stated, many also are happy to double "to show an opening hand" even though if asked they would call the bids "take-out doubles". (Coming up through the grades, so many of my top boards resulted in a post-hand inquest with one opponent saying to the other "But I had to double, I had 13 points!")

Just to round out the options, a few even play 2NT overcalls as balanced 20-22! In addition to all the above. So they have a huge armoury of available overcalls for those few occasions when they have a decent hand and an opponent happens to beat them to the opening bid.



You must play at my local club...
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#77 User is offline   jeffford76 

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Posted 2012-August-29, 10:24

 Quantumcat, on 2012-August-28, 18:37, said:

How likely is it that when you apply to get a method added, they allow it? My partner and I would love to have a holiday in America and play all the events for a year but not being allowed to play our system which has been carefully crafted over some years is really putting us off.

By the way is there a calendar on the ACBL website or elsewhere that shows which events use which convention chart?


As Michael said, they don't add things very often.

If you're considering coming to a national tournament, almost all of the open national events will use the midchart. Note that the midchart has variance in what you can play depending on the length of the rounds. For example multi is not allowed in pair games even though it's allowed in the big KO's and Swiss events. The exceptions are the Fast Pairs, which uses the general chart, and the Spingold and Vanderbilt which use the super chart. If you're playing super chart methods, you have to pre-register them and your opponents get time to look at them the day before.

Regional events (which include the side events at nationals) are much more variable. If a KO bracket has a high enough masterpoint level of participation, you can play midchart, and if not, you can't. If there's an A/X event that will also be midchart, but an open event will be GCC.
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#78 User is offline   Quantumcat 

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Posted 2012-August-30, 02:07

 jeffford76, on 2012-August-29, 10:24, said:

As Michael said, they don't add things very often.

If you're considering coming to a national tournament, almost all of the open national events will use the midchart. Note that the midchart has variance in what you can play depending on the length of the rounds. For example multi is not allowed in pair games even though it's allowed in the big KO's and Swiss events. The exceptions are the Fast Pairs, which uses the general chart, and the Spingold and Vanderbilt which use the super chart. If you're playing super chart methods, you have to pre-register them and your opponents get time to look at them the day before.

Regional events (which include the side events at nationals) are much more variable. If a KO bracket has a high enough masterpoint level of participation, you can play midchart, and if not, you can't. If there's an A/X event that will also be midchart, but an open event will be GCC.

Thanks, that was quite useful.
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#79 User is offline   ArtK78 

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Posted 2012-August-30, 08:57

When I first started playing duplicate bridge (early 1970s), one of the main clubs in the area was at the local Jewish Community Center (JCC). The level of play at the JCC was not high. Many of the players there had been playing for years and had advanced as far as they were ever going to advance.

It was here that I ran across what I referred to as the "JCC double." It was a takeout double with shortness in an unbid suit. A typical auction would proceed as follows:

(1) - x* - (P) - 1
(P) - 1NT** - (P) - 2***
(P) - 2NT****


* - the JCC double - could be a real takeout double, but....
** - Pard, I don't like your suit.
*** - But I really have spades!
**** - Pard, I really don't like your suit!

Eventually, the message got across, and they played in another suit or notrump.

In all of my experience at this club, the doubler never had extra values for the double followed by NT bid.
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#80 User is offline   helene_t 

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Posted 2012-August-30, 09:05

We once had this auction at a club night:
1-(x)-xx-(2)
pass-(2nt)-x-(all pass)

2 meant clubs, 2NT that she didn't like her partner's suit. +1100 for us.
The world would be such a happy place, if only everyone played Acol :) --- TramTicket
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