Nebulous 1m opening
#1
Posted 2013-August-09, 06:24
Although there is a problem with these openings. Since they are not natural(Does not promise 3 cards in the bid minor), you can use brown stickers vs these openings. Does someone use a strategy like this.
I have played CRASH style defense vs these nebulous openings, it is kinda annoying for opps who dont expect it.
Has anybody else tried some sort of defense vs these kinds of openings
#2
Posted 2013-August-09, 06:27
phoenix214, on 2013-August-09, 06:24, said:
Although there is a problem with these openings. Since they are not natural(Does not promise 3 cards in the bid minor), you can use brown stickers vs these openings. Does someone use a strategy like this.
I have played CRASH style defense vs these nebulous openings, it is kinda annoying for opps who dont expect it.
Has anybody else tried some sort of defense vs these kinds of openings
The ACBL has ruled that certain types of short club openings are natural rather than conventional.
With this said and done, you can use any defense against most short club / short diamond openings.
A multi 2♥ overcall (2♥ showing a weak 2 in either hearts or spades) is particularly nasty
#3
Posted 2013-August-09, 06:44
#4
Posted 2013-August-09, 07:23
The reason why very few people do it is because usually the nebulous opening doesn't always show a strong hand (examples: Polish 1♣ includes 12-14 bal, precision 1♦ includes 11-13 bal). As a result, it may be our hand, so we don't want to destroy our own constructive bidding. Brown Sticker Conventions have the tendency to complicate matters and sabotage precise constructive auctions.
#5
Posted 2013-August-09, 07:23
1♥/♠ = 3 or four cards with 5+ in either minor
2♣ = majors (can be 5-4)
2♦ = multi (weak nv but shows circa 11-15 vul)
2♥/♠ = 5M + 4m nv 5-5 vul
The 1M overcalls put them in unfamiliar territory, but require a lot of work on follow ups. The 2M bids are fairly constructive, but the main aim being to win the race to find a fit.
The two level bids as a whole take some strain off the 1♦ overcall (which is the weak spot), but 1♦ has some great boards where they show four cards in our suit.
#6
Posted 2013-August-09, 07:40
1♦ - both majors
1♥ - ♥+♣/♠+♦
1♠ - ♥+♦/♠+♣
1NT - ♣ or ♦
2♣ - Minors
2♦ - Multi
2♥/♠ - Muidberg,
The problem is, i dont know which of these is more troublesome for the opps. That is the main reason why did i start this thread
#7
Posted 2013-August-09, 07:44
Free, on 2013-August-09, 07:23, said:
Was it a face that said, "now give me a real explanation"? Surely there are hands with 0-3 spades that would do something else...or would a 4H/5m overcall have shown four spades on the side?
#8
Posted 2013-August-09, 12:50
MickyB, on 2013-August-09, 07:44, said:
Sigh, not this again... Whenever we didn't have 4 ♠s we were allowed to either describe our hand or bid 1♠, they weren't mutually exclusive...
#9
Posted 2013-August-09, 13:51
If it's not, you haven't disclosed properly. In places where you're allowed to play this, it can't be *detrimental* to your efforts to compete if the call is more random to the openers than to you - of course, whether it's legal or not...
#10
Posted 2013-August-11, 16:01
#11
Posted 2013-August-17, 10:52
We have fun with a double of a nebulous club meaning "I would have opened that", and use normal transfer walsh continuations, which gets the benefits of those constructive takeouts. If they are using transfers, 4th seat can overcall a transfer with a transfer!