Dealer: West Vul: None
Response to TOD Another Example
#4
Posted 2013-February-18, 10:29
It is a good idea to know how strong 2♦ is, and in particular, whether sequences as
1♦-x-p-2♦
p-2♥/2♠
can be passed by the 2♦ bidder. In the US usually people play that (in the sequence above) 2♥ and 2♠ are forcing, while in Europe people usually play it as NF (I live in Europe and I prefer to play it as forcing, so my life is full of suffering).
George Carlin
#6
Posted 2013-February-18, 10:41
"8+ with 4-4 majors or 10-11 with one 4-card major or GF any"
In the US the popular method is described as "2♦ is forcing until suit agreement" so
1♦-x-p-2♦
p-2♥-p-3♥ is NF, but for example
1♦-x-p-2♦
p-2♥-p-2♠ is F.
In Europe it could best be described as "2♦ is forcing but after this everything that can be NF is NF". But usually the European style works better for partscore deals, which tend to be quite numerous, so it's not a bad style at all. And playing many NF bids is more intuitive.
George Carlin
#8
Posted 2013-February-18, 11:13
Important Europe vs US difference, however: what is 3M?
Europe: 3M shows about 10 points and a 5-card suit.
US: 3M shows about 5 points and a 6-card suit (like a weak 2).
So in Europe you can bid any of 1M, 2M, 3M and 4M with a 5-card major (although 1M and 2M do not per se show a 5-card suit).
George Carlin
#9
Posted 2013-February-19, 03:25
And yes, your auction (2♥ - 4♥) looks fine. As for a double jump advance, I think this is better played in what gwnn describes as the American style. After a single jump, you can use the cue bid to differentiate between 4 and 5 card support and you often want to stay a level lower, even opposite 5 cards.
#10
Posted 2013-February-19, 03:31
gwnn, on 2013-February-18, 11:13, said:
This one is unanimous, just about everyone plays it as 4+. If you have 5, you just take that into account and jump about a queen lighter.
I don't think it is quite unanimous, there are some Dutch top pairs that play it as showing 5, or at least as strongly showing 5. In that style, with a 4-card suit you just bid at the 1-level with a modest 9-count and cue with a good 9-count.
But OK now I am confusing the thread with some non-standard ideas.
#11
Posted 2013-February-19, 03:34
Zelandakh, on 2013-February-19, 03:25, said:
What's the difference between this 'simpler way' and 'forcing to suit agreement'?
George Carlin
#12
Posted 2013-February-19, 04:15
#13
Posted 2013-February-19, 04:30
To helene_t: I always wanted to try simple jumps=5 cards, I think that means that you bid 1M with 0-10 and make doubler raise with all hands with 4-card support. I have seen my (Dutch) partner bid 1M with as much as 13 (!), maybe it's common to play something like that here?
George Carlin
#14
Posted 2013-February-19, 04:38
gwnn, on 2013-February-19, 04:30, said:
No.
Beginners are taught to jump with 8+. Some advanced players increase it to 9+ or maybe even 10+ (since they double quite aggresively, and doubler doesn't need much to raise with 4-card support) but more than that is likely to be a brain fart or beginner's mistake. You would still expect double to pass with a random 14-count and 3-card support.
#17
Posted 2013-February-19, 09:01
To quote a single post, click the Reply button directly underneath the post. To quote several posts at once, click the MultiQuote button underneath every post you want to quote and then click on the Add Reply button ate the very bottom of the thread (next to Start New Topic).
#18
Posted 2013-February-22, 07:09
Zelandakh, on 2013-February-19, 09:01, said:
To quote a single post, click the Reply button directly underneath the post. To quote several posts at once, click the MultiQuote button underneath every post you want to quote and then click on the Add Reply button ate the very bottom of the thread (next to Start New Topic).
Thank you for your patience and very clear answer, Zelandakh