How long has 2/1 been around?
#1
Posted 2024-June-14, 19:43
#3
Posted 2024-June-15, 01:42
#4
Posted 2024-June-15, 06:55
The speed at which new ideas are picked up within the group of expert players and, separately, how long it takes for some of those ideas to be popularized among club players (and what gets lost in translation when they filter down) is interesting to me. Surely it's faster now than it used to be, with more online material available. Things are probably somewhat less localized than before, but I also think there's still a lot of regional variation because certain methods are taught by popular teachers, or played by good players, in one area vs another.
#5
Posted 2024-June-15, 11:09
While it is definitely more popular, I'd imagine it is standard in most clubs, new players learning the game are seemingly obliged to learn "STD" (NA), ACOL (NZ) before ever hearing of the most popular, widely played approach. This is often justified by saying "we are teaching you what everyone else plays at your level".
#6
Posted 2024-June-15, 11:59
I think that would be the better approach but the second factor is that the teaching materials that are probably used by most teachers at clubs (many of whom, I think, are probably somewhat advanced players who are performing a service for their clubs, as opposed to folks who are really teachers first) are geared toward standard bidding. I'm thinking of, e.g., the Audrey Grant books and the materials provided by the ACBL.
#7
Posted 2024-June-15, 12:18
BTW "Acol" is a name not an acronym so it shouldn't be written as all caps.
#8
Posted 2024-June-16, 00:30
jdiana, on 2024-June-15, 11:59, said:
This.
Also, passed-hand bidding is different from responding to 1st/2nd hand bidding. 2/1 may have some appeal, but it is a paradigm that applied only when we have a 1♦/♥/♠ opening in 1st/2nd seat, partner has a gf hand without a 4-card in a higher-ranking suit and without primary support, and opps don't interfere. Maybe some 3-4% of all hands. It is hardly worth to clutter an already confusing bidding system with yet another paradigm when that paradigm caters to so few hands.
In Acol, it is not uncommon to agree that the following auctions
1♥-2♣
2♦
p-1♥
2♣-2♦
1♥-1♠
2♣
1♥-(1♠)-2♣-(p)
2♦
(1♣)-1♥-(p)-1♠
(p)-2♦
1♥-(x)-2♣-(p)
2♦
all have the same forcing character. The only exception beginners have to learn is that
1♥-(1NT)-2♣
is non-forcing.
Of course if everyone at the local club plays 2/1 then we will have to teach it to beginners, but given the choice I would prefer almost any other bidding system to 2/1.
#9
Posted 2024-June-16, 01:25
Stephen Tu, on 2024-June-15, 12:18, said:
https://acolbridgecl...om/club-history
The above website may be of interest to a few.
#10
Posted 2024-June-17, 06:33
helene_t, on 2024-June-16, 00:30, said:
I think you are missing the point here. 2/1 GF (like any other system) determines the way you bid *all* combinations of hands, not just the few specific combinations where a 2/1 GF actually takes place. It's just as different in almost all the other sequences where a 2/1 response was possible but did not take place, thanks to the inferences from this fact plus the artificial forcing 1NT response (not to mention other artificial responses that are not intrinsic to 2/1 GF but widely played here and not in older "standard" systems).
I think 2/1 GF with strong NT is quite sufficient as the only system a beginner knows. What he also needs is an understanding of "natural" bidding, but that can be explained without pretending it is a system.
#11
Posted 2024-June-17, 07:34
#14
Posted 2024-June-17, 09:31
jdiana, on 2024-June-17, 09:06, said:
I think the ideal place from this point if view would be Turkey, which early this century made the illuminated choice of 2/1 GF as the standard national system at all levels - and it shows when you pick up an unknown Turkish player on BBO.
The FIGB made a good job of standardizing systems in the past, but has struggled to do the same with 2/1 GF except in terms of teaching materials for beginners. Various attempts at a national standard have failed because of inconsistencies and excessive complexity. The De Facto national standard of 2/1 GF is BBOITA, which was written for BBO Italia by Mario Martinelli (unfortunately it is no longer maintained).
#15
Posted 2024-June-19, 02:12
pescetom, on 2024-June-17, 06:33, said:
This reminds me of a Moscito book I once read which was entirely about continuations after 1st/2nd seat openings, except for the last paragraph of the book which bluntly stated "when opening in 3rd/4th seat, we play Precision". So the reader is assumed to know Precision already, which begs the question why we don't just play Precision throughout. Moscito is supposed to be a simple system which it sort-off is, but if it doesn't replace the need to learn Precision but rather adds another system on top of Precision, it can hardly be simpler than Precision.
Maybe the ideal beginner system would be something like Phantom Club so that beginners wouldn't have to learn different systems for constructive and defensive bidding. When they progress to the improver state we could let the Phantom Club system evolve towards Polish club. But OK, beginners obviously need to learn something which is popular among their future partners and for which good teaching material is available in their native language.
I guess my point is that I would prefer to teach beginners as little system as possible, in particular I would prefer to avoid conventions and treatments which cater to very specific circumstances, so that there is a need to know what we do when the system is off.
In Acol, you don't need to discuss what you do when the system is off because the system is never off. Or, as you may prefer to put it, we don't play a system, we just play "natural".
#16
Posted 2024-June-19, 02:35
Both Moscito (in all four seats) and Precision can be simpler, and while I am a fan of one and not the other I think neither is suitable for true beginners. The systems themselves can be simple - easier than 2/1 even, I think - but it will significantly hurt the ability to find a partner in the future. Also playing a system that is so different from what the field is doing makes it more difficult to learn how to defend and draw inferences from the opponents' actions.
#17
Posted 2024-June-20, 13:22
I think the vast majority of expert partnerships use systems where a 2/1 response is game forcing, but not necessarily the 2/1 GF system (e.g. you can use this with Precision, Polish Club, etc.). This tends to make it easier to bid slams since you know immediately that you have at least game values, and have lots of room to explore for slam. Novices are less concerned about finding close games and slams.
#18
Posted 2024-June-23, 20:05
Both the books I've seen lately on versions of "Meckwell Lite" (Standard Modern Precision and Santa Fe Precision) assume that the reader has a good grounding in 2/1 GF, saying basically "anything we don't talk about here reverts to 2/1".
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean