1nt Containing A Five Card Major
#1
Posted 2008-January-31, 23:13
Also what is the correct bid
1c by rho
you hold
Qxx
Kx
AKJxx
Kxx
Is it better to overcall diamonds or 1nt
Thanks
Sheila
#2
Posted 2008-January-31, 23:33
On your second example I would bid 1NT. You have a nice source of tricks in Ds and the 1NT bid expresses the value of the hand better.
#3
Posted 2008-January-31, 23:49
First question is a matter of taste, in practice I always open 1NT.
- hrothgar
#5
Posted 2008-January-31, 23:56
#6
Posted 2008-February-01, 00:30
Basically overcalling 1♦ works if you belong to ♦ or you don't belong anywhere (i.e. partner is broke) and overcalling 1♦ works if you belong to NT or a major. The added bonus of reaching game in a much easier manner definitely tilts this decision towards 1NT.
Opening 1NT on 5 hearts is always good if you are a simple soul. Otherwise you have to invent a 3 card minor or rebid a 5 card heart suit on all them 15-17's over 1♥-p-1♠... Also, 1NT preempts them out of spades a lot. On 5 spades it should be only optional. But, with the risk of repeating myself, usually partner will be better placed if he knows your exact range. Well, you'll lose some against all those 1♠-p-2♠ all pass dudes, but what are you gonna do.
George Carlin
#7
Posted 2008-February-01, 00:38
(2) Easy 1NT. Really, this is the only choice. More interesting is the same hand with the diamonds swapped with a major. I would still overcall 1NT, but now you would get votes for overcalling in your 5 card major.
#8
Posted 2008-February-01, 00:55
One fellow I know will bid NT if his suit is hearts, but not spades.
Another will bid NT if he has 3 of the other major, but not if he has 2.
A third will look at the suit itself: If it is solid or has 2 holes, he bids the major, if it has 1 or 3 holes, he opens NT.
A fourth looks at the rest of his hand; if it's full of soft values, he bids NT, Aces he bids the suit.
I neither espouse nor deny any of these theories, but I do consider all of those factors when making a decision.
#9
Posted 2008-February-01, 01:05
#10
Posted 2008-February-01, 01:06
Most of the reasons for opening 1NT are "system" reasons -- your system doesn't give you a good rebid after 1♥-1♠ or 1♠-1NT when you have 15-17 balanced. Obviously system is a reason for picking one bid over another, but it's not an argument that the bid you're selecting is actually "better" -- just an argument that your choice of follow-ups is restricting your options.
Assuming you have "good" follow-ups, when you have a game on power it's unlikely to matter what you open. You can get to either of 4M or 3NT after either opening; you can find out about the five card major by playing puppet stayman or something over 1NT, or find out about opener's values over 1M by using structured methods after a 2/1 call. The only time it should really matter what you open (in a fundamental way not dependent on your choice of follow-ups) will be on hands where the auction stops in a partial.
In these cases, I think opening the major is a big winner. If your side has less than half the points, you will often make 1M when you can't make 1NT. 2M on a 5-3 or even 5-2 fit is likely a better partial than 1NT. And you will find some light games where responder has 3-4 cards in the major and side shortness, but would pass a 1NT opening. There aren't any hands where you can make game but partner passes a 1M call (it takes a lot less to bid over 1M than 1NT). The only really likely partscore win from a 1NT opening is being able to find a fit in the other major a bit more easily. But if opener has 5-3-3-2 shape, which do you think is more likely, a 5-3 spade fit or a 5-3 heart fit? And which is more likely to produce an extra trick, the potential 5-3 fit where the 3-card holding is in the possibly unbalanced hand, or where the 3-card holding is in a flat hand?
Of course, I've played systems that "tie my hands" in this sense, where the follow-up methods simply force me to open 1NT with a five-card major. And I agree that there are situations where the major is really bad (for example) and you're better off opening 1NT to avoid playing a 5-2 fit at the two-level. But when system permits a choice I open 1M most of the time on these hands.
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#11
Posted 2008-February-01, 01:45
the advantage for me, I dont need to decide, if the
quality of the suit is sufficient
#2 1 NT, you tell partner at onece about your shape,
and strength
With kind regards
Marlowe
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#12
Posted 2008-February-01, 01:50
awm, on Jan 31 2008, 11:06 PM, said:
Most of the reasons for opening 1NT are "system" reasons -- your system doesn't give you a good rebid after 1♥-1♠ or 1♠-1NT when you have 15-17 balanced. Obviously system is a reason for picking one bid over another, but it's not an argument that the bid you're selecting is actually "better" -- just an argument that your choice of follow-ups is restricting your options.
Assuming you have "good" follow-ups, when you have a game on power it's unlikely to matter what you open. You can get to either of 4M or 3NT after either opening; you can find out about the five card major by playing puppet stayman or something over 1NT, or find out about opener's values over 1M by using structured methods after a 2/1 call. The only time it should really matter what you open (in a fundamental way not dependent on your choice of follow-ups) will be on hands where the auction stops in a partial.
In these cases, I think opening the major is a big winner. If your side has less than half the points, you will often make 1M when you can't make 1NT. 2M on a 5-3 or even 5-2 fit is likely a better partial than 1NT. And you will find some light games where responder has 3-4 cards in the major and side shortness, but would pass a 1NT opening. There aren't any hands where you can make game but partner passes a 1M call (it takes a lot less to bid over 1M than 1NT). The only really likely partscore win from a 1NT opening is being able to find a fit in the other major a bit more easily. But if opener has 5-3-3-2 shape, which do you think is more likely, a 5-3 spade fit or a 5-3 heart fit? And which is more likely to produce an extra trick, the potential 5-3 fit where the 3-card holding is in the possibly unbalanced hand, or where the 3-card holding is in a flat hand?
Of course, I've played systems that "tie my hands" in this sense, where the follow-up methods simply force me to open 1NT with a five-card major. And I agree that there are situations where the major is really bad (for example) and you're better off opening 1NT to avoid playing a 5-2 fit at the two-level. But when system permits a choice I open 1M most of the time on these hands.
So we aren't considering the effect it has on opponents being able to overcall at the 1-level? Or to obstruct the opponents from finding their game.
#13
Posted 2008-February-01, 02:03
Sometimes missing the 5 - 3 major fit and playing 3NT is a blessing.
#14 Guest_Jlall_*
Posted 2008-February-01, 03:21
Echognome, on Feb 1 2008, 02:50 AM, said:
awm, on Jan 31 2008, 11:06 PM, said:
Most of the reasons for opening 1NT are "system" reasons -- your system doesn't give you a good rebid after 1♥-1♠ or 1♠-1NT when you have 15-17 balanced. Obviously system is a reason for picking one bid over another, but it's not an argument that the bid you're selecting is actually "better" -- just an argument that your choice of follow-ups is restricting your options.
Assuming you have "good" follow-ups, when you have a game on power it's unlikely to matter what you open. You can get to either of 4M or 3NT after either opening; you can find out about the five card major by playing puppet stayman or something over 1NT, or find out about opener's values over 1M by using structured methods after a 2/1 call. The only time it should really matter what you open (in a fundamental way not dependent on your choice of follow-ups) will be on hands where the auction stops in a partial.
In these cases, I think opening the major is a big winner. If your side has less than half the points, you will often make 1M when you can't make 1NT. 2M on a 5-3 or even 5-2 fit is likely a better partial than 1NT. And you will find some light games where responder has 3-4 cards in the major and side shortness, but would pass a 1NT opening. There aren't any hands where you can make game but partner passes a 1M call (it takes a lot less to bid over 1M than 1NT). The only really likely partscore win from a 1NT opening is being able to find a fit in the other major a bit more easily. But if opener has 5-3-3-2 shape, which do you think is more likely, a 5-3 spade fit or a 5-3 heart fit? And which is more likely to produce an extra trick, the potential 5-3 fit where the 3-card holding is in the possibly unbalanced hand, or where the 3-card holding is in a flat hand?
Of course, I've played systems that "tie my hands" in this sense, where the follow-up methods simply force me to open 1NT with a five-card major. And I agree that there are situations where the major is really bad (for example) and you're better off opening 1NT to avoid playing a 5-2 fit at the two-level. But when system permits a choice I open 1M most of the time on these hands.
So we aren't considering the effect it has on opponents being able to overcall at the 1-level? Or to obstruct the opponents from finding their game.
or the inherent advantage you gain in the cardplay after you have opened 1N and had some unrevealing auction (1N p 3N) or less revealing auction (1N p 2C p 2H p 3N)
or the fact that despite saying that "when you have game on power you can get to game either way you bid" 15 opp 9/10 and/or 16 opp 9/10 can be difficult to bid having opened 1H depending on what style you adopt. If you elect to not rebid 2H after an auction like 1H p 1N p 2D p with 10 then you will also find 2N with 10 opp 11/12 quite often. If you elect to rebid 2H with 10 then you will not find 15 opp 10. If you elect to bid more with 16 after 1M p 1N p 2x p 2M p then you will get too high with 16 opp 6/7 very often (or less if you can respond with less than 6, which everyone does). If you elect to pass with 16 you will miss 16 opp 9 games. If you elect to play something artificial to solve this problem (like gazilli) you lose the ability to play 2C. If you like gazilli anyways, you have to show an extra hand type in an already overloaded auction and have less accurate gazilli auctions.
or the fact that your 2m bids become less defined since you have to bid 2m on these hands, and the sequence that 2m followed by 2N becomes less defined than if 15-16 balanced is not a possible hand type (if you are playing you open 1N with 15-17 balanced 1H p 1N p 2D p 2H p 2N promises 4 diamonds, responder can back out in 3D now with 4 etc).
or the fact that if the opponents start bidding you are put in a lot of awkward spots having opened 1M. This is because "intermediate" range hands are inherently difficult to show in competitive auctions since they feel too strong to pass but are too weak to committ to a high level. This is a problem that weak NTers encounter fairly often. Even an auction like 1H 2S p p can become tough.
Adam, you really really oversimplify issues like this imo. "Should I open 1N or 1M with 5M332" is really a question that one cannot answer with simple arguments, it is a question that has overtones on the entire constructive bidding system, competitive auctions, leads, defense, etc. To me this is the equivalent of "what is better, 4 card majors or 5 card majors?" and someone answering "obviously 5 card majors, it makes it easier to find 5-3 fits in competitive auctions, and it is easy to find 4-4 fits anyways because you can play negative Xs and respond 1M to 1 of a major with 4." Obviously that question cannot be answered so simply, if at all.
#15
Posted 2008-February-01, 04:43
To alwyays open 1m with five of the suit is no bad idea, Adam mentioned some advantages for this method.
But like Josh and others, I tried different approaches myself with the same experiences: As long as you and your partner agree, everything works well.
For me it was a big gain to play weak NT including the 5 card major, no matter how the honour location was. But the main advantage was not the more frequent 1 NT opening and the uninformative bidding.
The main advantage for me had been that the 1 M openings are better defiend. They always have extra playing strength and do not include the dreaded weak 5332 hands.
And I strongly agree with Justin on one point: The strength and possible shape of your 1 NT opening is such a central cornerstone in any bidding system that any even small change has a big impact on the complete bidding system.
Roland
Sanity Check: Failure (Fluffy)
More system is not the answer...
#16
Posted 2008-February-01, 05:40
Quote
... which is surprising because French top players don't mind
#17
Posted 2008-February-01, 06:16
#18
Posted 2008-February-01, 06:23
Gerben42, on Feb 1 2008, 08:40 PM, said:
Quote
... which is surprising because French top players don't mind
But we live in Germany, we obey the laws.
Is there any expression in English for "päpstlicher als der Papst?"
Roland
Sanity Check: Failure (Fluffy)
More system is not the answer...
#19
Posted 2008-February-01, 06:31
Codo, on Feb 1 2008, 02:23 PM, said:
"More Roman than the Pope" gives 227 hits on Google while "More Catholic than the Pope" gives 20,000. So I stand corrected. Tx Csaba ♥.
This post has been edited by helene_t: 2008-February-01, 07:21
#20
Posted 2008-February-01, 06:40
Codo, on Feb 1 2008, 02:23 PM, said:
Gerben42, on Feb 1 2008, 08:40 PM, said:
Quote
... which is surprising because French top players don't mind
But we live in Germany, we obey the laws.
Is there any expression in English for "päpstlicher als der Papst?"
More Catholic than the Pope.
George Carlin