Weak NT overcall - your opinion?
#1
Posted 2013-December-19, 18:53
Your comments, experience and usual unrestrained criticism would be appreciated.
#2
Posted 2013-December-19, 19:53
#3
Posted 2013-December-19, 20:16
Also, a good chunk of the benefit of the 12-14 1N is that you get to play lots of thin 3N contracts with the opponents making a blind opening lead. This isn't happening very often when one opp has opened.
If you want to bid more, let me suggest something else. Make the takeout double on the weak NT type hands (even though they don't have takeout double shape), and use a 1N overcall as a more standard takeout double.
The too strong to overcall hands still double rather than bidding 1N.
When you double with these less suitable hands, you probably want a negative step response to the double (i.e. next step shows any hand 0-5, or 0-7 w/o a five card suit), on which you scramble with the weak NT hand and jump with the too strong to overcall hand (and cue bid opps suit on the really strong hand).
The point is that, with a normal takeout double, you are likely to have LOTT protection to the 2 level, so bidding 1N likely won't be bad, but a lot of the weak NT hands won't have that protection and you want to have the possibility of getting out at the 1 level.
Of course, this matters most when opps open 1♣ and makes almost no difference when opps open 1♠. If you don't mind the memory load, you could play this over a minor opening but go back to usual takeout doubles and strong NT overcalls over a major opening. With most people playing 5 card majors, you're much more likely to have the weak NT hand with a stopper in opps suit over a minor anyway.
I don't particularly like this system, but it allows you to bid all the hands you want and is safer than the 12-14 1N overcall.
#4
Posted 2013-December-19, 21:18
jillybean, on 2013-December-19, 18:53, said:
Your comments, experience and usual unrestrained criticism would be appreciated.
prefer double rather than 1nt
edit..ahh see akwoo made same point.
#5
Posted 2013-December-19, 22:41
I could use a stronger word, but silly will have to do.
That is not to say that I have not seen players who play it. But no one who I respect as a bridge player.
#6
Posted 2013-December-20, 00:25
#7
Posted 2013-December-20, 04:53
"It's only when a mosquito lands on your testicles that you realize there is always a way to solve problems without using violence!"
"Well to be perfectly honest, in my humble opinion, of course without offending anyone who thinks differently from my point of view, but also by looking into this matter in a different perspective and without being condemning of one's view's and by trying to make it objectified, and by considering each and every one's valid opinion, I honestly believe that I completely forgot what I was going to say."
#8
Posted 2013-December-20, 05:25
If you think the strong notrump overcall is too infrequent, you might consider playing raptor. I think that is a lot more useful than a weak nt overcall because the raptor hands are hands with which you actually should be entering the auction.
In any case, if you sacrifice the strong notrump overcall for something else, you will end up making off-shape take-out doubles with many 16 counts, and it is nice catering to that in your responses to t/o doubles, for example:
(1♥)-x-(pass)-?
- 1♠: normal
- 1nt: negative ("this is what I want to play if you have a strong nt overcall")
- 2m: semipositive
#9
Posted 2013-December-20, 05:32
http://www.fernside....lStructure.html
Its a lot of fun, and radically increases the % of time you can take action in the direct seat after an opening. I'm not sure its massively plus style - its probably not, but you can generally take action (the exception is a (32)44 hand when they've opened your short major
#10
Posted 2013-December-20, 09:18
If you do this, please report back on how it works.
#11
Posted 2013-December-20, 09:35
You are going to be doubled and down way too often. If you declare OR defend you might as well show the opponents your hand.
As opposed to an upside of...... nothing I can think of.
What is baby oil made of?
#12
Posted 2013-December-20, 10:42
#13
Posted 2013-December-20, 10:58
George Carlin
#14
Posted 2013-December-20, 11:15
With the overcall all of that goes out the window. When responder doubles, she knows a *lot more* about the hand than when overcaller doubles the opening. They're going to guess wrong a lot less often, and you don't have the safety that your partner has the balance of the rest of the points half-ish of the time. Also, doubler has a great lead - the strong hand's long suit.
One of the benefits of a Raptor NT overcall is that it stops you from bidding 1NT on a random good 15 balanced - and getting doubled by any random 8 on your left. It's only going to get easier if you drop the range.
There are some places and some times where this wins due to the unexpectedness (opponents don't know and misplay). Unfortunately - except for the ethics of it - the ACBL now isn't one of those places and times, that overcall is explicitly Alertable ("Natural 1NT overcalls in the range of 14 to 19 HCP require neither an Alert nor an Announcement. If the top or bottom limit of the natural notrump overcall is out of that range or conventional by an unpassed hand, an Alert is required.")
#15
Posted 2013-December-20, 11:46
#16
Posted 2013-December-22, 09:19
#17
Posted 2013-December-22, 10:15
wank, on 2013-December-20, 11:46, said:
YES
Lorne50, on 2013-December-22, 09:19, said:
And, YES.
As a result of these learned pieces of advice, people who must always "do something" will Double instead,, despite Wank's "hence, no Double". Yet, the same thoughts in the above posts should apply to Doubles.
#18
Posted 2013-December-22, 13:04
George Carlin
#20
Posted 2013-December-22, 15:44
gwnn, on 2013-December-22, 13:04, said:
And their partners need to adjust how or whether they dare advance these doubles. Their expert partners can figure out the strength across the table without this assistance, and the Double merely gives the other side more tools without taking up any room.
Players do well to learn from experts, but I don't believe so in this case. At least the ill-advised weak NT overcall takes up a bit of the opponents' space on occasion.