serious 3nt opinions required please
#21
Posted 2005-June-15, 14:54
PS No idea what this word means, but i hope it makes me sound intelligent.
PPS My angle on this, and i coincidentally agree with Roland, however much it pains me: the 3NT in this auction is NOT serious with regards to my understanding of this convention; it is just offering p a choice of games with most likely a 4-3-3-3 shape (or even more balanced )
PPPS Ah well going for my 5th tequila slammer... this Internet Cafe sucks...
PPPPS Nothing to say, just that 4 Ps looks sooooooo sexy (and the Tequila taking effect)
#22
Posted 2005-June-15, 15:26
WinstonM
#23
Posted 2005-June-15, 18:07
In the auction in question, 1m-1M-2M-?, you don't need serious 3nt as opener is sharply limited. You need 3nt as natural if the raise can be done on 3 cards. If the raise absolutely guarantees 4, then 3nt could be used artificially, but "serious 3nt" won't be the best use of the bid. (Perhaps it can be used to distinguish voids/singletons).
I only play serious 3nt (or more usually frivolous 3nt) after "game forcing major suit agreement at 3 level when neither partner is limited". Otherwise the natural meaning is often far too valuable to give up.
#24
Posted 2005-June-15, 19:07
Nothing wrong with playing 3NT as choice of games with balanced hands.
#25
Posted 2005-June-15, 19:24
I agree with Stephens comment that Serious 3N is especially useful when either partner is unlimited, yet Opener can still have a wide range for the single raise, especially in context of todays garbage openings that seem to be in vogue.
#26
Posted 2005-June-16, 03:00
luke warm, on Jun 15 2005, 03:53 PM, said:
P_Marlowe, on Jun 15 2005, 12:20 PM, said:
to play, is the rule, we follow, always.
this isn't true... fred defines serious 3nt as (paraphrasing) "an 8 card or longer major suit fit in a game forcing auction"... how oh how did 2s on the example auction establish a game force? if it did not establish a game force, then opener (the 2s bidder) can not be expected to understand 3nt as anything other than an offer to play, regardless of responder's intent
Hi Luke,
as it is so often the case, it depends on partnership
agreement.
You stress the point, that 3NT is only serious, when
the auction is already game forcing.
Thats fine, but then it will be near impossible for
responder to bid 3 NT as serious:
1D - 1S
2S - 3C (1)
3S (2) - 3NT (3)
(1) game try, however you play it, it could be intended
as adv. cue bid, but nobody knows, but then, it does
not create a game force
(2) minimum, no interest in game, hence no game force
(3) with your definition: it is not serious, in other word
responder will need to use LTTC and Lackwood,
to make it clear, that he really has strong interest
in slam
Looking at those implications, I really prefer my simple rule,
I may give up on the choice of game, which would be nice to
have and I may loose out there, but I will avoid
misunderstandings groping up in LTTC and Lackwood sequences.
With kind regards
Marlowe
PS: As a side note: Due to lack of judgement, I dont play very often,
I will sometimes get it wrong, which game I should choose, following
my simple rule, I will stop agonizing about those close decisions
and save my stamina.
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#27
Posted 2005-June-16, 05:09
Quote
exactly right... and btw, it's only a matter of agreement when the p'ship plays something other than the system in question... serious 3nt is defined in the notes, and that's the system we're playing
Quote
2S - 3C (1)
3S (2) - 3NT (3)
in this auction, i'm not quite clear on what's happening... i've seen people bid a 4 card spade suit before a 5 card club suit, with a gave forcing hand.. i don't do it, but i have seen it
the 3s bid to me says "i have 4 spades"... this is necessary since the 1S bid could only be 4 cards... 3nt shows a good hand imo but if i had slam interest i'd continue to cue else bid rkc... why would i want to deny interest in 3nt when often that's the best spot?
just my opinion...
#28
Posted 2005-June-16, 06:04
pclayton, on Jun 16 2005, 03:24 AM, said:
As long as opener promises 4 bananas. Otherwise you could relay with 2 or 3 oranges (or two notrump) and then use serious 3NT after opener showed 4 bananas.
But why would you do that? Opener's strength is reasonably well defined and responder is captain. So opener must cooperate if responder starts cuebidding. There's little need to bypass 3NT in order to ask opner not to cooperate with a minimum, since he allready showed a minimum.
#29
Posted 2005-June-16, 06:47
P_Marlowe, on Jun 16 2005, 04:00 AM, said:
luke warm, on Jun 15 2005, 03:53 PM, said:
P_Marlowe, on Jun 15 2005, 12:20 PM, said:
to play, is the rule, we follow, always.
this isn't true... fred defines serious 3nt as (paraphrasing) "an 8 card or longer major suit fit in a game forcing auction"... how oh how did 2s on the example auction establish a game force? if it did not establish a game force, then opener (the 2s bidder) can not be expected to understand 3nt as anything other than an offer to play, regardless of responder's intent
Hi Luke,
as it is so often the case, it depends on partnership
agreement.
You stress the point, that 3NT is only serious, when
the auction is already game forcing.
Thats fine, but then it will be near impossible for
responder to bid 3 NT as serious:
1D - 1S
2S - 3C (1)
3S (2) - 3NT (3)
(1) game try, however you play it, it could be intended
as adv. cue bid, but nobody knows, but then, it does
not create a game force
(2) minimum, no interest in game, hence no game force
(3) with your definition: it is not serious, in other word
responder will need to use LTTC and Lackwood,
to make it clear, that he really has strong interest
in slam
Looking at those implications, I really prefer my simple rule,
I may give up on the choice of game, which would be nice to
have and I may loose out there, but I will avoid
misunderstandings groping up in LTTC and Lackwood sequences.
With kind regards
Marlowe
PS: As a side note: Due to lack of judgement, I dont play very often,
I will sometimes get it wrong, which game I should choose, following
my simple rule, I will stop agonizing about those close decisions
and save my stamina.
Alert convention Abuse
P has bid 2s and 3s Good Grief! They have nothing. They could not make some game try back to you over 3clubs. Note here they could have bid 3d or 3h not 3s but did not. Opener sounds like he has one of my 10HCP NV openers.
AKXX=XX=QJXX=XXX
Serious 3nt comes up very rarely, most of the time just make your cuebids or bid game. Convention abuse and overuse.
#30
Posted 2005-June-16, 15:47
Quote
responder will need to use LTTC and Lackwood,
to make it clear, that he really has strong interest
in slam
No, you don't. When one partner has shown a minimum, then a minimum-minimum, if the other partner is still cue-bidding, he of course has strong slam interest. You don't need to distinguish strong interest from weak interest after someone has been limited! If you only had mild interest, if opener has shown no signs of life you just sign off in game, you shouldn't be interested anymore.
3NT as serious 3NT in these types of situations is a waste of a bid.