2/1 and minor suit games 2/1
#1
Posted Yesterday, 13:13
One regular partner says 2/1 is forcing to games of 3N, 4H, 4S but not to games of 5C or 5D. For various reasons, that makes sense to me, but I do not know whether that is standard for 2/1 bidders.
My other regular partner was surprised that I passed out this auction. I was dealer. The auction was: 1S, (P), 2D, (2H), 2S, (3H), 4D, all pass.
Now my question is not whether I should have bid spades a third time. I did not like bidding 4S because I thought partner was warning me away from spades and ny high card strength was dead minimum (10 hcp and 2 quick tricks). I did not like bidding 5D because partner's 2D bid did not (and should not) promise strength to make a game at the five level. (In fact, 4S is a reasonable contract even though it fails by one trick against perfect defense. 5D fails by one trick against routine defense.) My question is whether, having judged that both 4S and 5D would probably go down, I am forced by 2/1 to bid one of those games. Or is the partner who insists that you are not forced by 2/1 to bid minor suit games against your better judgment correct?
Thank you.
#2
Posted Yesterday, 13:21
Your style wins when you cannot make any game despite holding game values (possible when your only fit is a minor, but generally rare); partner’s style wins when responder has a bit extra and needs to pick the right contract.
I think most 2/1 players prefer the approach where 2/1 is an absolute game force and accept the occasional loss when both players are very minimum and you can’t make a game.
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#3
Posted Yesterday, 13:37
awm, on 2025-August-16, 13:21, said:
#4
Posted Yesterday, 13:59
In this auction, 4D is non-forcing; 3N might be non-viable because you are missing a heart stopper.
I suppose if any of my partnerships were serious enough, we should have a more firm agreement, but all of my partnerships have had more pressing issues to worry about.
#5
Posted Yesterday, 15:10
Your style wins when you cannot make any game despite holding game valued (possible when your only fit is a minor, but generally rare); partner’s style wins when responder has a bit extra and needs to pick the right contract.
I think most 2/1 players prefer the approach where 2/1 is an absolute game force and accept the occasional loss when both players are very minimum and you can’t make a game.
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#6
Posted Yesterday, 15:18
akwoo, on 2025-August-16, 13:59, said:
Is there a way to reconcile these two sensible answers? There seems to be a way to do that in this specific auction, namely an understanding that a pass in a 2/1 auction while it remains below 3N is forcing. In this example, if the 2D bidder bids 4D that could say no heart stopper, a void or singleton in spades, minimum strength, and good diamonds. A forcing pass would say no heart stopper, a void or singleton in spades, but the strength to force to the five level. This is a sort of slow arrival type of call. But such an understanding works here only because there was intervention and a pass by the 2D bidder would not terminate the auction. So, I do not see a way, at least not immediately, to reconcile both answers when there is no intervantion. I shall think some more.
#7
Posted Yesterday, 17:15
At least in North America
Make 2/1 100% game forcing
Or of course don't play 2/1.
In your OP example please remember
Opener did NOT have to rebid 2S and responder did not have to rebid 4D. That means something....
#8
Posted Yesterday, 18:43
JeffMorrow, on 2025-August-16, 15:18, said:
This one is easy. We do not worry about stoppers when there is no interference. Therefore, there is no reason to bypass 3N when there is no interference. Therefore, 4m is forcing.
Part of this is that I am mostly playing matchpoints, so, even when we are missing a stopper, if there is no interference, playing 3N hoping they don't lead (or continue) our stopperless suit scores better on average than playing 5m.
#9
Posted Yesterday, 21:37
JeffMorrow, on 2025-August-16, 13:13, said:
You didn't mention vulnerability so I just left it at none vul.
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
Our ultimate goal on defense is to know by trick two or three everyone's hand at the table. -- Mike777
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
#10
Posted Yesterday, 23:22
#11
Posted Today, 04:39
The 100% GF variant seems to get the upper hand, but this may just be my impression.
It is a simpler rule set.
The problem is, which seq. are an attempt to get out in 4D, and which seq. want to set
trumps / ask for keycards, whatever.
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#12
Posted Today, 06:31
And a pass over 3H here is forcing in either style. Playing 100%, it tells partner we have a singleton in his spades and no stopper in their hearts: Do Something Intelligent please.
#13
Posted Today, 07:02
(1) One of the major advantages of 2/1 is the simplicity it provides to auctions where the likely final contract is a slam, 4♠, or 4♥, or 3N. Try not to mess that up.
(2) 2/1 may occasionally force you into bad minor suit games. But no system is perfect. You need to tolerate the cost of the presumably infrequent bad results induced by the system in order to enjoy the benefits of the presumably much more frequent good results.
(3) Despite the foregoing, overcalls and two-suited take-out doubles provide additional information that may make 3N an obviously bad bet. It is not complicated to adopt the understanding that 4♣ and 4♦ are merely invitational to a minor-suit game, but ONLY after intervention. This understanding would take advantage of extra information to reduce bad results with no complication at all to normal 2/1 bidding.