2♥/2♠/3♣? Does 2♥ imply a weaker hand that might discourage partner from bidding 2NT with 15-16?
Basic 2/1 Question
#1
Posted 2015-December-15, 13:38
2♥/2♠/3♣? Does 2♥ imply a weaker hand that might discourage partner from bidding 2NT with 15-16?
-- Bertrand Russell
#2
Posted 2015-December-15, 13:51
This hand should rebid 2S. If you don't mind giving up your natural 2D rebid, you could play Bart.
http://www.bridgeguy...convention.html
#4
Posted 2015-December-15, 15:53
#6
Posted 2015-December-15, 20:26
Inviting with five hearts is a weak point in vanilla 2/1. The standard thing to do is bid 2nt. If opener has three hearts he can bid them on the way to game if accepting, but you can miss hearts opposite a 5314 11 count (for example).
BART (and other similar methods) solve this problem at the cost of losing a natural and NF 2♦ call in this auction.
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#7
Posted 2015-December-15, 21:07
awm, on 2015-December-15, 20:26, said:
Inviting with five hearts is a weak point in vanilla 2/1. The standard thing to do is bid 2nt. If opener has three hearts he can bid them on the way to game if accepting, but you can miss hearts opposite a 5314 11 count (for example).
BART (and other similar methods) solve this problem at the cost of losing a natural and NF 2♦ call in this auction.
For some reason, the way you explained this, which was very good, suggested an idea to me. With the emergence of 2C as an expansive tool, a 2D response tends to carry less weight. The diamond holding, conversely, is problematic with Bart. A possible theoretical solution that I have not before considered might be to make a 2D response the sole 2/1 that is not GF. Maybe a Lawrence 2D, a Hardy 2H, and a Modern GF semi-artificial 2C. A loose parallel exists in Colin Ward's Golady plus Toddler, and maybe he was onto something.
-P.J. Painter.
#8
Posted 2015-December-16, 03:18
awm, on 2015-December-15, 20:26, said:
Inviting with five hearts is a weak point in vanilla 2/1. The standard thing to do is bid 2nt. If opener has three hearts he can bid them on the way to game if accepting, but you can miss hearts opposite a 5314 11 count (for example).
OK, but are you saying that the hand I gave in the OP is an invitational hand? I rather thought at the time, with 9 opposite 12-14, I don't want to be in game, but I certainly do want to give opener a chance to show more than 14, so I must keep the bidding alive. Is 2♥ or 2♠ (or possibly 3♣) the best way to do that?
By the way, I am well aware of the existence of Bart, Lisa, Gazzilli, etc. so y'all can stop mentioning those now.

-- Bertrand Russell
#9
Posted 2015-December-16, 20:33
#10
Posted 2015-December-17, 02:29
the example hand is a bit too weak for a 3c raise, imo.
#11
Posted 2015-December-26, 18:15
mgoetze, on 2015-December-15, 13:38, said:
2♥/2♠/3♣? Does 2♥ imply a weaker hand that might discourage partner from bidding 2NT with 15-16?
the general purpose answer is to not play 2/1. if you bid immediate 2h with 5 h's and 10+, your second rnd 2h is a comfortable 6-9. is this suit long enough? yes, if you instruct pd to bid 2s with just 1 h. then he has real c's. this technique requires that r. be 25xx, 16xx, 155x, or at least 3 c's. occasionally you will wish you were back in 2c, but in the age of 1n forcing, you seldom have that luxury any way.
#12
Posted 2015-December-26, 20:25
mgoetze, on 2015-December-15, 13:38, said:
- 2♥ = Usually 6-cards but your ♥ suit is chunky. Nevertheless, there is a risk of playing in a silly contract.
- 2♠ = Raise/preference (IMO less constructive than 2♥).
- 3♠ = Jump preference (an overbid).
- Pass = Unenterprising.
- 3♣ = Unlikely to achieve much.
- 3♥ = Fit jump (but only by agreement).
#13
Posted 2015-December-26, 22:23
Grant/Rodwell...1S-1N, 2C-3H example xx AQJxxx Kxx xx knr 12.6
Hardy...1S-1N, 2C-3H example 4 AKJT73 QT92 64 knr 15.1
Bergen...1S-1N, 2D-2H example 4 KQJ65 8743 965 "Remember that partner may have only 3 diamonds."
Bergen...1S-1N, 2m-2H example 84 KJ9432 7 Q763
Root...1S-1N, 2D-2H example 62 KQJ96 74 T987 "shows 6 to 10 points and a very strong five-card suit, or any six-card or longer suit. In effect your 2H bid says
'Partner, I have no support for your two suits, but I have a very substantial suit of my own; I am prepared to play my suit even if you pass with a singleton heart.' "
#14
Posted 2016-January-02, 10:59
#15
Posted 2016-January-02, 15:47
Pass. I'm unenterprising on this.
#16
Posted 2016-January-02, 16:00
fromageGB, on 2016-January-02, 15:47, said:
A jump shift to 3♣ is gameforcing. For some people 3♣ would even be artificial, and their maximum for 2♣ would be 19, but with nothing so fancy, we'll say the max is 17. It's certainly not 16.
Taking a false preference on 9+ points is a completely standard thing to do in these sorts of methods, my only question here was whether 2♥ might be even better than the false preference. Pass is not an option as far as I'm concerned.
-- Bertrand Russell
#17
Posted 2016-January-02, 20:29
mgoetze, on 2016-January-02, 16:00, said:
Taking a false pref on 9 or 10 points is completely standard. 2♥ might well be better here; but I probably wouldn't do it unless the spades were xx and the hearts a bit chunkier. I agree that passing 2♣ is just plain wrong.
#18
Posted 2016-January-04, 17:44
As you are assuming/hoping he is strong, I'd go with hearts. If I'm forced to play this wide range method at MPs I'd probably tank for a long time before coming down on hearts or pass. Thinking that he can't be balanced (if his 1NT may include a 5 card major), if he is 16/17, presumably he would have rebid spades on a 6xx4, so the options left for the 2♣ rebid are very limited. This pushes the odds way back into the weak category, so having tanked, I'm passing.
2♥/2♠/3♣? Does 2♥ imply a weaker hand that might discourage partner from bidding 2NT with 15-16?