Kokish The wrong way round?
#1
Posted 2016-August-18, 09:37
My favourite partner and I play Kokish over a 2♣ opening. We bid 20-22- the slow way, mainly since this allows us to play in 3 and show a couple of other hands. Anyway, the problem with this approach arises when a spade contract is reached via Puppet (or any variety of) Stayman.
Neither this issue nor the extra hand-types we get to show come up pretty much ever. So is there a clear advantage one way the other? (The other NT range in 2♣ is 25+).
#2
Posted 2016-August-18, 10:17
Vampyr, on 2016-August-18, 09:37, said:
My favourite partner and I play Kokish over a 2NT opening. We bid 20-22- the slow way, mainly since this allows us to play in 3 and show a couple of other hands. Anyway, the problem with this approach arises when a spade contract is reached via Puppet (or any variety of) Stayman.
Neither this issue nor the extra hand-types we get to show come up pretty much ever. So is there a clear advantage one way the other? (The other NT range in 2♣ is 25+).
I think Welland-Auken play
2♣-?:
2♦ = 5+ H or waiting
...2♥ = 20-21 bal. / 5+ H, GF values
......P = 5+ H, very weak (assumes Opener has 20-21 bal.!!)
......(...)
...(...)
2♥ = 5+ S
...2♠ = 20-21 bal.
...(...)
(...),
which solves the right-siding problem and enables them to stop in 2M, the latter being an advantage of the "slow = weaker" approach.
#3
Posted 2016-August-18, 11:22
nullve, on 2016-August-18, 10:17, said:
2♣-?:
2♦ = 5+ H or waiting
...2♥ = 20-21 bal. / 5+ H, GF values
......P = 5+ H, very weak (assumes Opener has 20-21 bal.!!)
......(...)
...(...)
2♥ = 5+ S
...2♠ = 20-21 bal.
...(...)
(...),
which solves the right-siding problem and enables them to stop in 2M, the latter being an advantage of the "slow = weaker" approach.
That is interesting. Obviously we can also stop in 2M; it doesn't matter which way round for that purpose, but of course these contracts are always wrong-sided. I like the W/A methods.
#4
Posted 2016-August-18, 11:44
#5
Posted 2016-August-18, 13:17
iandayre, on 2016-August-18, 11:44, said:
LOL just a typo. I will fix.
#6
Posted 2016-August-18, 15:30
Vampyr, on 2016-August-18, 09:37, said:
My favourite partner and I play Kokish over a 2♣ opening. We bid 20-22- the slow way, mainly since this allows us to play in 3 and show a couple of other hands. Anyway, the problem with this approach arises when a spade contract is reached via Puppet (or any variety of) Stayman.
Neither this issue nor the extra hand-types we get to show come up pretty much ever. So is there a clear advantage one way the other? (The other NT range in 2♣ is 25+).
I've been told that the reason for playing the weaker range through Kokish is that you can combine it with transfers to allow you to play in 3C/D opposite a weak hand.
London UK
#7
Posted 2016-August-18, 16:14
gordontd, on 2016-August-18, 15:30, said:
Yes, that is our main reason but the trouble is that it rarely comes up, and one disadvantage is that with the vastly more frequent 20/21 all spade contracts are wrong sided.
#8
Posted 2016-August-18, 17:31
Vampyr, on 2016-August-18, 09:37, said:
Absolutely. Playing it the unusual way round, you get to call it 'Diet Kokish'.
#9
Posted 2016-August-18, 19:34
Jinksy, on 2016-August-18, 17:31, said:
Which way is unusual though? When we started playing it this way, we didn't know if anyone else had ever done so, but it seems to be popular now.
#10
Posted 2016-August-20, 05:49