Strong 2 Diamonds open 18-19 and balanced
#1
Posted 2018-November-10, 16:39
Opener = 2 diamonds 18-19 points HCP
Responder = 2 Hearts 0-6 points or 2 Spades 7+ points
Opener rebids = 2NT
Responder = Stayman, Transfer or Pass
she is not aware of a name (convention) for this
please comment.....
thanks
Éloi
#3
Posted 2018-November-10, 17:27
C3: Copious Canape Club is still my favorite system. (Ultra upgraded, PM for notes)
Santa Fe Precision ♣ published 8/19. TOP3 published 11/20. Magic experiment (Science Modernized) with Lenzo. 2020: Jan Eric Larsson's Cottontail ♣. 2020. BFUN (Bridge For the UNbalanced) 2021: Weiss Simplified ♣ (Canape & Relay). 2022: Canary ♣ Modernized, 2023-4: KOK Canape.
#4
Posted 2018-November-10, 21:27
Transfers make more sense to make use of the fact one hand is limited and you can often place the contract and let big hand play it.
I suspect the people using a negative/positive approach may also including other hand type into 2♦. Like a strong ♦ hand for example.
#5
Posted 2018-November-10, 23:07
The reason behind this is simple: most natural systems (Acol, SAYC, 2/1) play a 2NT rebid in the range of 17-19 already. If partner has enough to respond, 5-6+ HCPs, you won't be missing games anyway, and the same applies to the Mexican 2♦. A 18-19 balanced hand can be opened at the one level and constructive bidding can take place if responder has enough to bid.
The only very, slight advantage it has is if opener is 4432 and 18-19 in a five card major system, and has to open one of a minor in a three card suit, and responder is too weak to bid, and the opponents do not have enough to balance, and you are left to play at the one level in that minor. Or alternatively, opener opens one of a minor with a four card suit, and again responder doesn't have enough to bid, and there's a better fit in a major suit available. But statistically that happens rarely.
But as I say with everyone who plays this game, it's your system and if you feel happy playing a Mexican 2♦ that's your choice.
And welcome to the forum
#6
Posted 2018-November-11, 13:44
The_Badger, on 2018-November-10, 23:07, said:
The reason behind this is simple: most natural systems (Acol, SAYC, 2/1) play a 2NT rebid in the range of 17-19 already. If partner has enough to respond, 5-6+ HCPs, you won't be missing games anyway, and the same applies to the Mexican 2♦. A 18-19 balanced hand can be opened at the one level and constructive bidding can take place if responder has enough to bid.
The only very, slight advantage it has is if opener is 4432 and 18-19 in a five card major system, and has to open one of a minor in a three card suit, and responder is too weak to bid, and the opponents do not have enough to balance, and you are left to play at the one level in that minor. Or alternatively, opener opens one of a minor with a four card suit, and again responder doesn't have enough to bid, and there's a better fit in a major suit available. But statistically that happens rarely.
But as I say with everyone who plays this game, it's your system and if you feel happy playing a Mexican 2♦ that's your choice.
And welcome to the forum
That isn't the sole advantage - in the sequence 1m - 1M, 2NT rebids can now be used for the bridge world death hand and its associates - that is, a good hand with 6m3M. That can be quite the useful tool to have on hand. Competitively I'm told it can be good to know opener doesn't have 18-19 balanced as well, though I've never played this in an otherwise standard system and don't know how often that purported benefit comes up.
The original Mexican 2!D, though it changed a fair bit, was practically essential for Romex to function - the system was comprehensively designed to have limited 1-level suit openings, after all, and its unnatural 1NT open meant that without the 2♦ open to take off the slack balanced hands might be difficult to efficiently bid. In more standard systems it's a bit of a bolt-on, even if it isn't one without merit.
As for whether it has enough merit to be worth playing... eh. Lauria-Versace played (play?) it, I recall that. Bocchi uses 2♣ as 18-19 balanced, which seems a far more effective opening to use for it than 2♦, even if it means normal 2♣ openers have less space. With the responses above? It's garbage, alas.
#7
Posted 2018-November-11, 14:05
The 2♦ opening is useful as the 18-19 balanced hands can otherwise be awkward in some contested auctions. It also frees up the 2NT rebid (after a 1m opening) for other uses.
Maybe the biggest advantage is that when you open 1m and subsequently makes a reopening double or a strong raise of partner's suit, partner knows that your have an unbalanced hand.
The 2♥ response is best played as a puppet to 2♠. Responder should not be showing points, as they know opener's points and can therefore just decide to bid game or not.
2♠ is a puppet to 2NT.
2NT is a puppet to 3♣.
3♣ can be used for some weak hand that can't be covered by any of the puppets.
3♦ is a transfer to hearts.
#8
Posted 2018-November-11, 14:19
#9
Posted 2018-November-11, 14:36
#10
Posted 2018-November-11, 15:58
paulg, on 2018-November-11, 14:36, said:
Not many Italians play it any more, and most agree that the developments were tough to remember. But they say it had some real benefits when it does come up: for example, it frees up a 2NT rebid to show neat things like a single-suit reverse, reverse with fit in responder's suit, multi including these two meanings and others besides.
#11
Posted 2018-December-04, 15:42
All the others played 1C since responder is too weak to bid (3 HCP?).
Awful (for me). But I suspect the reason for having this vs. e.g. a strong 1C opening system is, as other posters say, the rebids you free up.
#12
Posted 2018-December-07, 04:31
We played the following responses to the 2D opening:
Pass = Weak with diamonds.
2H = 4+ spades, may be weak. Not 4 hearts if GF. Opener bids 2S with 2-3 spades and 2NT with 4 spades.
2S = To play 2NT/3NT, or a GF hand with 4+ hearts (not 4 spades).
2NT = Puppet to 3C. Weak with clubs, or weak with hearts, or any slam invitational single-suiter, or balanced slam invitational.
3C = Stayman, has 4-4 majors or 5+ spades and 4 hearts.
3D = 5+ hearts and 4 spades.
3M = GF with short major and both minors.
3NT = GF with 5-5 majors.
4m = Transfer to major.
#13
Posted 2018-December-09, 03:41