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Responder's reverse Your opnion's please

#1 User is offline   Lurpoa 

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Posted 2011-October-24, 15:27



A Responder's reverse is best played as game forcing.

That is what all experts seem to agree on.

I am trying to understand the reason for that.

Can you just not play it as one round forcing ? Or to 2NT ?

Is this statement true for all natural systems ? SAYC ? 2/1 ? Acol ?

I have to say that playing Acol, different variations, I always was teached, that the Responder's reverse was only 1round forcing, and that opener had to bid his full hand.

Any opinions on this ? Many thanks.



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#2 User is offline   Yu18772 

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Posted 2011-October-24, 22:16

Just my general thoughts on the subject - I cant imagine a sequence with responders reverse (at 2 level), unless opener rebids 1NT - that would just be 4th suit, or opener rebids his minor (as Vampyr kindly pointed out :))
If it is opposite 1NT the opener is always weak, balanced (or close) and limited, and the reverse is into a major that opener had denied -

1-1-1NT-2/2
1m-1-1NT-2
In addition most advanced+ partnerships play some variation of nmf/checkback etc... that allows to show invitational hands and 5 card suits with lower bids, so imo responders reverse is the lowest available bid, that doesn't have an obvious natural meaning and it is low enough to let opener describe the hand further without cramping the 3 level. Even without nmf type conventions, most of invitational hands have a comfortable bid on these auctions, on the other hand establishing a gf without jumping to game is pretty tricky, and its definitely beneficial to establish a gf as low as possible. Also you need a way to show a slam invitational hand, without passing game level (often 3NT).



If the reverse is opposite a rebid of a minor (1m-1x-2m-2M) it is still always into a major that was denied by the opener, and the opener is again pretty limited and weak(although the range is larger than 1NT). In a way, showing a gf+ hand at low level by responder is even more problematic with this type of auctions. Again - if we examine these auctions:

1 -1 -2-2M
1m -1- 2m-2

the reverse is the lowest bid that has apparently no sense as "natural", and leaves enough room at 3level. If you played it as invitational+ the opener will have to jump to with better hands (accepting the invitaion), which would leave little or no room for a stronger responder which may had wanted to establish a gf suit at 3 level or inquire about distribution. I would be interested to know if people differentiate between the 2 and 2 bids on the auctions where both are possible?

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#3 User is offline   Vampyr 

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Posted 2011-October-24, 22:40

View PostYu18772, on 2011-October-24, 22:16, said:

Just my general thoughts on the subject - I cant imagine a sequence with responders reverse (at 2 level), unless opener rebids 1NT - that would just be 4th suit.


I can imagine opener's rebiding his own suit -- 1-1-2-2 etc.
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#4 User is offline   Yu18772 

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Posted 2011-October-24, 22:58

View PostVampyr, on 2011-October-24, 22:40, said:

I can imagine opener's rebiding his own suit -- 1-1-2-2 etc.


You are right - sorry - will edit the post accordingly :)



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#5 User is offline   gordontd 

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Posted 2011-October-25, 02:31

View PostLurpoa, on 2011-October-24, 15:27, said:

Can you just not play it as one round forcing ? Or to 2NT ?

Is this statement true for all natural systems ? SAYC ? 2/1 ? Acol ?

I have two partners with whom, in the context of a system based more on Acol than Std Am, we have the agreement that responder's reverses are only forcing for one round.

It has the advantage that we can bid our suits in the natural order with a 4153 11-count for example. It has the disadvantage that having done so, opener now needs to blast to game with a 14-count, rather than just raising. Which has the further effect that you can't improvise by rebidding a strong three-card suit.

In a strong-NT context, you need responder's reverses to be forcing to game because opener might rebid 2NT with a minimum hand concealing a four-card major. In a weak-NT context, if opener rebids 2NT concealing a four-card major, the hand will be strong.
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#6 User is offline   Lurpoa 

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Posted 2011-October-26, 13:24

View Postgordontd, on 2011-October-25, 02:31, said:

I have two partners with whom, in the context of a system based more on Acol than Std Am, we have the agreement that responder's reverses are only forcing for one round.

It has the advantage that we can bid our suits in the natural order with a 4153 11-count for example. It has the disadvantage that having done so, opener now needs to blast to game with a 14-count, rather than just raising. Which has the further effect that you can't improvise by rebidding a strong three-card suit.

In a strong-NT context, you need responder's reverses to be forcing to game because opener might rebid 2NT with a minimum hand concealing a four-card major. In a weak-NT context, if opener rebids 2NT concealing a four-card major, the hand will be strong.





You seem to confirm that in Acol those responder reverses are often played as only inviting...
Why would it be thatin SAYC the experts advice against such a treatment ????


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#7 User is offline   whereagles 

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Posted 2011-October-27, 03:01

View PostLurpoa, on 2011-October-24, 15:27, said:

1. Can you just not play it as one round forcing ? Or to 2NT ?

2. Is this statement true for all natural systems ? SAYC ? 2/1 ? Acol ?


1. A reverse by responder forces to at least 2NT, so has to show 11+ hcp (you need 23+ hcp for 2NT). The difference between 11 hcp (invite range) and 12 hcp (GF range) is minimal, so you might as well play it as GF and make it simple. You could try lowering it to 10+ hcp and play it as F1 only, but good luck...

2. As far as I know, yes.
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#8 User is offline   Lurpoa 

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Posted 2011-October-27, 14:52

View Postwhereagles, on 2011-October-27, 03:01, said:

1. A reverse by responder forces to at least 2NT, so has to show 11+ hcp (you need 23+ hcp for 2NT). The difference between 11 hcp (invite range) and 12 hcp (GF range) is minimal, so you might as well play it as GF and make it simple. You could try lowering it to 10+ hcp and play it as F1 only, but good luck...

2. As far as I know, yes.






something to say for that....

and indeed, limit-bidding was a cornerstone of the early Acol system.... I learned Benji-Acol from my grandpa...So this is probably why a lot of Acol players will consider a reponder reverse as only one round forcing....

But you clearly think, as most experts, that in SAYC it is GF. Does everybody agree with that ?




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#9 User is online   blackshoe 

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Posted 2011-October-27, 19:33

View PostLurpoa, on 2011-October-27, 14:52, said:

But you clearly think, as most experts, that in SAYC it is GF. Does everybody agree with that ?


Probably not, but it is what the ACBL SAYC booklet says.
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#10 User is offline   MrAce 

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Posted 2011-October-27, 21:39

View PostVampyr, on 2011-October-24, 22:40, said:

I can imagine opener's rebiding his own suit -- 1-1-2-2 etc.


Unless coincidentally, 2 is not a suit in this auction.
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#11 User is offline   Bbradley62 

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Posted 2011-October-27, 21:58

View Postblackshoe, on 2011-October-27, 19:33, said:

View PostLurpoa, on 2011-October-27, 14:52, said:

But you clearly think, as most experts, that in SAYC it is GF. Does everybody agree with that?
Probably not, but it is what the ACBL SAYC booklet says.

FWIW: BBO's step-by-step SAYC convention card says it's game forcing.
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#12 User is offline   Lurpoa 

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Posted 2011-October-28, 15:11

View Postblackshoe, on 2011-October-27, 19:33, said:

Probably not, but it is what the ACBL SAYC booklet says.






Right !

But comming back to my question...

Is that really the best treatment ? as all experts tell me... and why ? up to now, somebody volunteered "for the sake of simplicity", and why not ?

But is that the only reason, tghat all the experts agree to play the responder's reverse as GF ?




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#13 User is offline   Zelandakh 

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Posted 2011-October-30, 07:39

If you are talking spceifically about experts then you have to take account of the likely agreements in place. A large number of experts play some sort of reverse Flannery response scheme after a 1m opening. This removes most of the 5H-4S hands from a 1H response and makes a 2S rebid well defined. For example, if you play 1m - 2H as weak and 1m - 2S as invitational then it is obvious that 1m - 1H; 2m - 2S has to be game-forcing. Similarly, the majority of experts play some form of Walsh over a 1C opening. In this case, should you have a 4 card major then you would only respond 1D over 1C with a game-forcing hand. Hence 1C - 1D; 2C - 2M is automatically defined as game-forcing. It is certainly playable for Responder's reverse not to be game-forcing - for most Acol players the idea of it being something else is completely alien - but given the most common expert agreements it seems to be unharmonious to do so.
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#14 User is online   blackshoe 

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Posted 2011-October-30, 08:12

The way I learned Walsh (via Romex) you bid 1 with a four card major (in response to 1) when you have invitational values or better. I suppose that's a minority view, but it does work, even if you're not playing Romex. Of course, reverses (and jump shifts) in Romex are more akin to those in Precision than those in a "natural" system, since the opening 1 bid is limited (to 18 HCP) in Romex.
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#15 User is offline   gordontd 

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Posted 2011-October-30, 13:24

View PostLurpoa, on 2011-October-26, 13:24, said:

You seem to confirm that in Acol those responder reverses are often played as only inviting...

Not often, sometimes.

View PostLurpoa, on 2011-October-26, 13:24, said:

Why would it be thatin SAYC the experts advice against such a treatment ????

Because in Std Am you rebid minimum balanced hands with 2NT, sometimes concealing a four-card major. In Acol, if you rebid a balanced hand concealing a four-card major, you have enough extra to force to game.
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#16 User is offline   Lurpoa 

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Posted 2011-October-30, 15:25

View Postgordontd, on 2011-October-30, 13:24, said:

Not often, sometimes.

Because in Std Am you rebid minimum balanced hands with 2NT, sometimes concealing a four-card major. In Acol, if you rebid a balanced hand concealing a four-card major, you have enough extra to force to game.







I really do not understand what you are trying to say.

The responder reverse is essentially done with unbalanced hands: 5 4...s


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#17 User is offline   MrAce 

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Posted 2011-October-31, 17:25

View PostLurpoa, on 2011-October-30, 15:25, said:



I really do not understand what you are trying to say.

The responder reverse is essentially done with unbalanced hands: 5 4...s





You are wrong

1--1
2--2

AQx AQxxx xxx Jx

1--1
2--3

xxx AKJxx xx AQx

Bidding the suits with the intention of being natural (4+) when pd already denied them is not the best way to use those bids. As i said earlier, 2nd bid of responder if reverse being natural is coinsidential.
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#18 User is offline   Lurpoa 

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Posted 2011-November-01, 00:22

View PostMrAce, on 2011-October-31, 17:25, said:

You are wrong

1--1
2--2

AQx AQxxx xxx Jx

1--1
2--3

xxx AKJxx xx AQx

Bidding the suits with the intention of being natural (4+) when pd already denied them is not the best way to use those bids. As i said earlier, 2nd bid of responder if reverse being natural is coinsidential.






Agreed, you could play it like that. Better have agreed on that possibiliity with partner; to avoid play in the 3-3 fit.

When I play Acol with grandpa, it is always 4 5, and we play it as one round forcing. Supporting the second color is a proposal to play in the 43fit.

Why is it that the experts, at least in SAYC, insist to play it as a game force ?

And even, when, as you suggest; it could be a 3 card, why should this be now game force ? It could be simply an invite to 2NT (other possiblites are: opener rebid his color or our first colr as a proposal to end the bidding).



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#19 User is offline   jmcilkley 

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Posted 2024-January-03, 07:11

I hope someone is still reading this thread!
It happened to me with the bidding going 1d-1h-2d-2s
so is that game forcing or only 1 round.If it is game forcing then there is no need for opener to jump to 3nt with a club stop - they can just bid 2nt to allow responder to show 6 hearts maybe.
If the reverse is only 1 round forcing then what does opener need to have in order to go to 3nt? Did the reverse show 13+? 12+? or 11+? So with 12 points opener doesn't know whether to bid 2nt or 3nt. Of course, opener may have only 10 or 11 points for 1d-2d (probably with a 6 card suit), so does that change the mathematics?
This situation only arises when opener bids and rebids a minor so maybe responder's reverse in these situations should show a bit more and be game forcing. After all, after 1d-1h- opener's rebid of 2d denies 4 spades so what can reponder's 2s bid now show if not game forcing?
It seems the discussion of this topic has, so far, left many things still very vague.
Can anyone add more light to this topic?
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#20 User is offline   pescetom 

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Posted 2024-January-03, 07:32

The first necro is the deepest B-)

Is this really still a burning doubt among the remaining Acol players in 2024?
For almost everyone else I think it is game forcing, for the reasons you suggest.
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