New suit on the 2-level after overcall What is standard near you?
#1
Posted 2010-December-01, 11:25
(1♦) 1♥ (p) 2♣
and
(1♠) 2♣ (p) 2♥
Is this forcing or not?
What would a jump in a new suit (3-level) be? Natural and (non)forcing, i.e. the other hand, or a fitjump?
Note that I chose two sequences that are not Rubens transfer sequences.
#2
Posted 2010-December-01, 11:46
#3
Posted 2010-December-01, 11:52
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#5
Posted 2010-December-01, 12:07
At the one-level and the three-level I'd play them as forcing.
A jump in a new suit would be a fit-bid.
London UK
#6
Posted 2010-December-01, 13:30
-- Bertrand Russell
#7
Posted 2010-December-01, 16:00
2♣ can be a 4card
2♥ is 5 card
a jump in that position is a weak 5 card, prempt and competitive
#8
Posted 2010-December-01, 16:17
Fit jumps are fine, but they are more valuable in competitive auctions. When 3rd chair passes, there is a good chance its our hand.
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#9
Posted 2010-December-01, 17:44
The first one I play as non forcing, but my definition is "forcing unless you overcalled with crap". Because it is not totally forcing, 3♣ is now forcing.
About what is standard aroudn me, I think 98% players don't even know. But they will pass the second one often.
#10
Posted 2010-December-01, 18:29
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
#11
Posted 2010-December-01, 19:11
Facing a one-level overcall, I think there's a good case for playing new suits as non-forcing. You almost never have a hand that wants to insist on game opposite a simple overcall. If I did have such a hand, I could live with having to guess which game to play in, treat a doubleton as support, or risk a non-forcing new-suit bid.
#12
Posted 2010-December-01, 20:57
I can't recall a partner who explicitly discussed the difference between these two sequences (after a 1-level overcall vs. after a 2-level overcall), incidentally -- in the case of your first auction, NFC has been nearly universal when I've filled out a card at a partnership desk.
With my regular partner the jump shift is a fit bid, but I wouldn't assume that without discussion.
#13
Posted 2010-December-01, 21:07
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We're in the universe, and the universe is in us.
#14
Posted 2010-December-02, 07:21
With kind regards
Marlowe
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#15
Posted 2010-December-02, 07:32
By default, I treat (1♦) 2♣ (p) 2♥ as non-forcing and this seems to be the way it is usually intended. I am far from certain that this is best. I think that somewhere in Mike Lawrence's Complete Book of Overcalls (and I believe he has an update that I haven't bought) he prefers forcing but accepts that most people play it as non-forcing. Maybe I'll get the update for myself as a Christmas present.
#16
Posted 2010-December-02, 07:44
- hrothgar
#17
Posted 2010-December-02, 07:47
mgoetze, on 2010-December-01, 13:30, said:
Proposed solution: don't play Robson Segal.
I think that the bridgematters website has a nice interview with Eric Rodwell. I couldn't say it any better than he did.
- hrothgar
#18
Posted 2010-December-04, 09:57
han, on 2010-December-02, 07:47, said:
Thanks Han, that sure helped.
Anyway, I understand from your other post that you forgo fit jumps in these auctions. How do you define 2NT?
-- Bertrand Russell
#19
Posted 2010-December-04, 15:05
For others around here I think it is a mixture of all three - forcing, non-forcing, and no agreement. Just recently the opponents' bidding stopped in a making partscore, with a good fit and game values, because responder thought it was forcing and opener didn't. Unfortunately for me, the game unavoidably goes off with wasted values, finesses wrong.
#20
Posted 2010-December-05, 16:46
han, on 2010-December-02, 07:47, said:
I think that the bridgematters website has a nice interview with Eric Rodwell. I couldn't say it any better than he did.
Well, I reread the interview (it's been a year or so), but I don't feel enlightened.
Quote
Eric Rodwell: It is something that I only play with a couple of partners. It is difficult to play because you have a lot of trouble clarifying the better hands. If you just put everything in an omnibus multi-meaning negative double, and then have the eventual three level jump raise by the opponents, you are just going to have terrible trouble sorting it out. Playing standard, I definitely don’t like them. I just want to be able to make my forcing free bid. The only time I play them is playing a strong club system where my partner’s hand is limited. As for . . . Negative Free Bids, I recommend not using them.
So basically I should only play NFBs in conjunction with a strong club or the like. But what are the ". . ." NFBs he recommends not using?
-- Bertrand Russell