coded minor suit openings continuations
#1
Posted 2014-January-24, 05:55
1♣= natural or 18-20 balanced
1♦=natural or 12-14 balanced
I know PhilKing much prefers to play it the other way (why, btw?). But if 1♣ is (semi)forcing and 1♦ is nonforcing, I would think it is better if the board belongs to opps anyway whenever we play 1m in a 2-3 fit. It might depend on the vulnerability, though.
One problem I see with the follow-ups to 1♣ is that when it starts
1♣-1banana
2/3♣
opener can't rebid 2♣ with 11-17 points, if responder can have a.o. 8-9 points without club tolerance, yet 3♣ with 15-17 points is not great either if responder can have a misfitting yarb. The same problem may appear in relation to opener's reverse, depending on what a banana is and what it means.
How is this problem solved in systems like Dutch Doubleton and Strefa?
I can imagine a number of options:
- Not worry about it
- Respond 1NT/2♣/2♦ with all hands with 7-10 and no 4-card majors. Note that it is safe to raise clubs with 3-card support.
- Play a Polish-like response structure with some kind of artificial 1♥ rebid maybe?
- Play a 2-way 1NT rebid that is either some unbalanced range or 18-20 balanced.
Ideally I would like to play transfer responses but if 1♦/♥ ( --> ♥/♠) is 4+M with any strength, we would need to accept the transfers with minimum hands with long clubs. I doubt that that is worth it. So probably better to play a Polish-like structure.
Something else: It occurs to me that the auction
1♣-1NT (7-10)
pass
is a very narrow target. It is only when opener is 4414 and responder 3352 that we don't have a 7-card minor suit fit. Not sure if this insight is any useful, though. But with Ant590 I used to play 1♣-1NT as about 11 points so that we avoid playing 2nt. That was in the context of T-Walsh in which system a natural 1NT response is not really necessary, though.
Something else: Should we open 1♦ with 4-5 minors? I would think that it is necessary only with less than say 17 points. With 17-19 you can allow responder to pass your reverse if he is bust. The real monsters could be build into the 2nt rebid.
Any thoughts?
#2
Posted 2014-January-24, 07:49
#3
Posted 2014-January-24, 08:00
helene_t, on 2014-January-24, 05:55, said:
1♣= natural or 18-20 balanced
1♦=natural or 12-14 balanced
I know PhilKing much prefers to play it the other way (why, btw?).
T-Walshe (if played correctly), is so powerful that it should be used frequently, so the fact that 12-14 is way more common makes a big difference. Also, the stronger range in 1♦ can handle the loss of room more easily.
But if 1♣ is (semi)forcing and 1♦ is nonforcing, I would think it is better if the board belongs to opps anyway whenever we play 1m in a 2-3 fit. It might depend on the vulnerability, though.
Vulnerable you are better off having opened a club with the weak NT when partner is broke, since you an extra place to run if doubled. I guess you could make a case the other way NV, though I am actually switching to weak NT.
One problem I see with the follow-ups to 1♣ is that when it starts
1♣-1banana
2/3♣
opener can't rebid 2♣ with 11-17 points, if responder can have a.o. 8-9 points without club tolerance, yet 3♣ with 15-17 points is not great either if responder can have a misfitting yarb.
In my style, partner passes 1♣ with the misfitting yarborough, since he is facing nat clubs or a weakie. So if partner does repond, we are one-suited, things are pretty normal (though with T-Walshe I have five ways of rebidding 3♣).
The same problem may appear in relation to opener's reverse, depending on what a banana is and what it means.
Well I play the sequence 1♣-1♥(showing spades)-2♦ as a HEART reverse. So we can even stop in 2♥. Opener can move again with a huge hand, but won't get carried away. Diamond reverses just complete the transfer (100% forcing) and responder gets to define his strength, leading to a similar position.
How is this problem solved in systems like Dutch Doubleton and Strefa?
I can imagine a number of options:
- Not worry about it
- Respond 1NT/2♣/2♦ with all hands with 7-10 and no 4-card majors. Note that it is safe to raise clubs with 3-card support.
- Play a Polish-like response structure with some kind of artificial 1♥ rebid maybe?
- Play a 2-way 1NT rebid that is either some unbalanced range or 18-20 balanced.
Ideally I would like to play transfer responses but if 1♦/♥ ( --> ♥/♠) is 4+M with any strength, we would need to accept the transfers with minimum hands with long clubs. I doubt that that is worth it. So probably better to play a Polish-like structure.
This problem is an illusion. After all. most people who play 1♣ on a balanced 18-19 respond on crap and can't stop in 1M, and my view is that using transfers to stop at 1M is just completely wrong.
Something else: It occurs to me that the auction
1♣-1NT (7-10)
pass
is a very narrow target. It is only when opener is 4414 and responder 3352 that we don't have a 7-card minor suit fit. Not sure if this insight is any useful, though. But with Ant590 I used to play 1♣-1NT as about 11 points so that we avoid playing 2nt. That was in the context of T-Walsh in which system a natural 1NT response is not really necessary, though.
Something else: Should we open 1♦ with 4-5 minors? I would think that it is necessary only with less than say 17 points. With 17-19 you can allow responder to pass your reverse if he is bust. The real monsters could be build into the 2nt rebid.
With T-Walshe, I play 1♣-1♦-1NT as 45m minimum. Ship it.
Any thoughts?
See above ...
#4
Posted 2014-January-24, 22:32
*** And how far up? Only 1m openers? Or change higher opening bids? Eg as suggested 2C or 2D, even 1Nt?
#5
Posted 2014-January-25, 15:01
Cyberyeti, on 2014-January-24, 07:49, said:
Actually, taking the 12-14 balanced hands out of the 1♣ opening should allow us to put more club-oriented hands into it.
#6
Posted 2014-January-25, 15:36
For instance, he doesn't like being used as a human shield when we're being shot at.
I happen to think it's a very noble way to meet one's maker, especially for a guy like him.
Bottom line is we never let that difference of opinion interfere with anything."
#7
Posted 2014-January-26, 06:22
Maybe we should change the forum title to "non-natural philosophical discussion" if we need to resolve what a banana is and what it means. A profound question, and I have no answer. Is it 42?
#8
Posted 2014-January-26, 09:01
fromageGB, on 2014-January-26, 06:22, said:
Silly may be a tad strong - it is only because some of us play split ranges that we are able to put many awkward hands through a transfer completion.
Anyway, this is only number three on my list of why split ranges balanced hands within a 1♣ opening is a bad idea.
#9
Posted 2014-January-26, 14:05
PhilKing, on 2014-January-26, 09:01, said:
Anyway, this is only number three on my list of why split ranges balanced hands within a 1♣ opening is a bad idea.
What are the two main reasons?
I was thinking of inverted minors auctions, and in auctions like
1m-(1♠)-x-(pass)
?
where opener can describe his hand more accurately if there is only a single (narrow) balanced-hand range included in the 1m opening.
#10
Posted 2014-January-26, 14:19
helene_t, on 2014-January-26, 14:05, said:
I was thinking of inverted minors auctions, and in auctions like
1m-(1♠)-x-(pass)
?
where opener can describe his hand more accurately if there is only a single (narrow) balanced-hand range included in the 1m opening.
You open 1C, showing clubs or 11-13 NT or 17-19 NT. Next seat makes a WJO. Partner has to be relatively conservative, as the default assumption is that you'll have an 11-13 NT. You may struggle to express the values of your 17-19 NT without getting overboard, especially if the next hand raises.
In contract, if you open 1m showing a 17-19 NT or an unbalanced hand, partner can be very aggressive, and take a lot of pressure off your balanced 17 counts.
#11
Posted 2014-January-26, 15:37
helene_t, on 2014-January-26, 14:05, said:
I was thinking of inverted minors auctions, and in auctions like
1m-(1♠)-x-(pass)
?
where opener can describe his hand more accurately if there is only a single (narrow) balanced-hand range included in the 1m opening.
The other reason (other than that described by MickyB) is that your responding strategy varies even without competition. Over of a minor showing a minimum balanced hand or natural, our best strategy is to go quietly with balanced rubbish, but opposite the natural or strong balanced range, we can profitably look for a better spot. Playing split range spoils this.
I am slighty deranged about this one, since my partner has responded on sub-minimum balanced trash three times and we have gone for 500, 800 and 800. passing would have escaped a penalty each time.
#12
Posted 2014-January-26, 16:09
- 1C:1S!, 1N and 1C:1R, 2M can show 17-19 NTs. I suspect Phil is getting higher on these hands having opened 1D
- The 17-19 NT usually gets to declare in responder's major, especially if you play transfers after 1C:1R, 1N
- You get to preempt more on your weak NTs. This may sound silly, but 1D-P-1N is much more preemptive than 1C-P-1S. Likewise 1D-P-1S rather than 1C-P-1H!. Overcalling 2C over 1D can preempt yourself out of a major fit. Oppo can choose to play (1C) 2C as natural and 1C (2D) as majors; there's no equivalent method over a 1D opening.
- You can choose to make 1C forcing, removing club hands from the 2C opener
I disagree with Phil's argument that you want to use T-Walsh as much as possible. T-Walsh exists because the most frequent responses to 1C should show [4+spades] and [4+hearts]. This is already the case over a 1D opening! Weak NTs don't need the extra space, they don't gain from declaring, and auctions like 1C-(P)-1D!-(1S); 2H are often brutally wrongsiding when you've got, say, a weak NT with three low spades.
#13
Posted 2014-January-26, 16:21
Quote
1♣-1banana
2/3♣
opener can't rebid 2♣ with 11-17 points, if responder can have a.o. 8-9 points without club tolerance, yet 3♣ with 15-17 points is not great either if responder can have a misfitting yarb. The same problem may appear in relation to opener's reverse, depending on what a banana is and what it means.
You've lots of space to sort this out if you want to make it a priority - I don't currently.
Quote
1♣-1NT (7-10)
pass
is a very narrow target. It is only when opener is 4414 and responder 3352 that we don't have a 7-card minor suit fit.
1C:1S!, 1N = 17-19
1C:1S!, 2C = unbal, can be 4414. As you say, this will find a seven-card fit unless partner is 3352.
1C:1N = 5+clubs 0+hcp, now 2C = any 17-19 NT
Quote
No, once again, you've plenty of space over the 1C opening to show C+D and stop in 2m.
One possible scheme -
Completing the transfer = bad 2C rebid or C+D any strength
2C = good 2C bid
2D = some kind of raise
#14
Posted 2014-January-26, 18:31
MickyB, on 2014-January-26, 16:09, said:
- 1C:1S!, 1N and 1C:1R, 2M can show 17-19 NTs. I suspect Phil is getting higher on these hands having opened 1D
This is an argument for my way, imo. Yes I get to 3M when I have 18-20 with 4-card support. This is hardly a hanging offence. In return I get many more ways to raise to 2M on hands that are not strong enough to go higher. For instance, after 1♣-1♦, I can bid 2♦ to show a sound raise to 2M with four trumps and raising via a completion to show a good 3-card raise. This means I can reserve the direct raise for total minimums. This both gets me to thin games, whilst staying low when responder would have made a doomed game try. It's not just about the F word - it's natural to put more effort in to stopping low on the minimum hands, since the strong ones are more likely to be OK at the three level.
- The 17-19 NT usually gets to declare in responder's major, especially if you play transfers after 1C:1R, 1N
This is true.
- You get to preempt more on your weak NTs. This may sound silly, but 1D-P-1N is much more preemptive than 1C-P-1S. Likewise 1D-P-1S rather than 1C-P-1H!. Overcalling 2C over 1D can preempt yourself out of a major fit. Oppo can choose to play (1C) 2C as natural and 1C (2D) as majors; there's no equivalent method over a 1D opening.
- You can choose to make 1C forcing, removing club hands from the 2C opener
This is also true, but "much" is an overbid, since a double of 1♠ is equivalent to a double of 1NT - the extra option they have is pass then double, as I have found to my cost, but that is only relevant when you respond on balanced filth. And we are the ones preempted some of the time. 1♣-1♠ can be the prelude to accurate minor auctions opposite the balanced hands in a way that 1♦-1NT by definition ends.
I disagree with Phil's argument that you want to use T-Walsh as much as possible. T-Walsh exists because the most frequent responses to 1C should show [4+spades] and [4+hearts]. This is already the case over a 1D opening! Weak NTs don't need the extra space, they don't gain from declaring, and auctions like 1C-(P)-1D!-(1S); 2H are often brutally wrongsiding when you've got, say, a weak NT with three low spades.
I like the argument, but I have not seen many hands where this has cost. It could be an argument for a different use for support doubles.
See above.