About gambling 3NT
#1
Posted 2022-May-17, 00:32
#2
Posted 2022-May-17, 01:12
- Most people place sharp restrictions on the side suit honours opener is allowed to hold - e.g. 'no aces or kings outside your long suit'. That way partner will know that a side suit is wide open if they don't have values there, and they can run to 4m or 5m (or leave it in and pray the defenders choose the wrong lead).
- If the opponents have most of the values the goal is not to make 3NT but rather to go down only a few opposite their major suit game, or to sacrifice in 5m. The auction 3NT-(X)-5♣ (pass or correct) puts quite a bit of pressure on the opponents.
- There are not that many great other uses for a 3NT opening bid. Strong hands are much better shown over multiple rounds of bidding, to collect as much information as possible for game and slam decisions. And if you're going to stick some weak hand in a 3NT opening, it may as well be non forcing. But there are some alternatives: I think Brink-Drijver use 3NT as 'a good 4♥/4♠ opening', kind of like a Namyats but with extra bidding space and softer requirements. I've also seen wild stuff like '3NT shows a 5cM with a 6cm' but I think that's not very common or effective.
#3
Posted 2022-May-17, 01:50
sunnytofu, on 2022-May-17, 00:32, said:
How often are you pulling the 3NT bid? If the opponents are always running the other suits, maybe you're not pulling it when you should be.
#4
Posted 2022-May-17, 02:00
I agree that it is rare that you will open 3NT and even rarer that partner will leave you to play in 3NT. But we have skipped three full rounds of bidding so I don't want the bid to be high frequency and do want the bid to be very specific.
#5
Posted 2022-May-17, 02:22
Tramticket, on 2022-May-17, 02:00, said:
I agree that it is rare that you will open 3NT and even rarer that partner will leave you to play in 3NT. But we have skipped three full rounds of bidding so I don't want the bid to be high frequency and do want the bid to be very specific.
And also it being specific can lead you to good slams that are difficult to find otherwise, the fact that you know about the 7th card can be the difference between 11/12/13 tricks in auctions where you can't otherwise be clear about the length.
#6
Posted 2022-May-17, 05:46
25-27 balanced? Last time I had a hand like this was when....before the year 2000 (And you can bid these hands through a game forcing 2♣ opener.)
A minor suit with ♣/♦ AKQxxxx or AKQJxxx That happens a lot more so that is why it is used as a 3NT opening bid.
As other forum commentators have said, you need to know that it is a specific hand with a minor suit like this and no more than a Q outside in any of the side suits. If you feel that 3NT is not the best contract you need to pull the contract from 3NT..
#7
Posted 2022-May-17, 05:49
#8
Posted 2022-May-17, 06:11
sunnytofu, on 2022-May-17, 00:32, said:
Never having had opportunity to use if but I imagine it is called "Gambling" for a good reason it seems a wonderfully useful pre-empt from time to time
I remember reading on a Bridge teaching site that natural 3NT was generally best avoided so there is a spare bid - could the natural and gambling be combined as some kind of multi-3NT or is that what its like anyway?
#9
Posted 2022-May-17, 07:13
thepossum, on 2022-May-17, 06:11, said:
Incidentally I do play two-way 3NT over our 3♣/3♦ opening - either to make, or a weak raise to 4m that invites partner to bid again.
#10
Posted 2022-May-17, 07:15
#11
Posted 2022-May-17, 07:55
AL78, on 2022-May-17, 05:49, said:
That makes sense and indeed passing 3NT gambling rarely works out. But I wouldn't be in a hurry to sacrifice a great preempt like 3♤ for such a low frequency gain.
#12
Posted 2022-May-17, 07:55
AL78, on 2022-May-17, 05:49, said:
That makes sense and indeed passing 3NT gambling rarely works out. But I wouldn't be in a hurry to sacrifice a great preempt like 3♤ for such a low frequency gain.
#13
Posted 2022-May-17, 09:33
Even not catering to declarer holding a sec king, you should still lead the ace in case a switch is needed, or in case declarer has the Jack sec and dummy Qxx or such.
The reason people underlead honours is that they want to retain a finesse position against declarer, but that is irrelevant when declarer is known not have anything to finesse against. So you lead an honour, preferably an ace and otherwise a king.
#14
Posted 2022-May-17, 09:42
eagles123, on 2022-May-17, 07:15, said:
I have 2 favourite G3N moments.
Winning the pairs at the county congress for the first time due to a 2 board round against the pair that were leading consisting of a 3N-7N (partner had 3 AKs and 2 cards in my suit) and a +1130 which is normally not a bad board.
An old partner psyched one -P- I'm looking at 4 clubs to the Q and 4 diamonds to the A, so I know he's psyched, I figure he knows what he's doing so I pass. Opening leader does what he's supposed to do, leads an ace, sees my Jx and assumes he's getting a come on from his partner's card. He was disabused of this when his partner showed out on the next one, declarer took 6 hearts and my ace for -100 against a vulnerable game.