Sense check Forcing or not
#1
Posted 2014-March-19, 08:08
LHO opens 1N (12-14 if it matters)
partner overcalls a natural 2♠ (he did have 2 suited bids available)
RHO passes
you bid 3♣
is this
forcing
invitational
bad hand
#2
Posted 2014-March-19, 08:20
Cyberyeti, on 2014-March-19, 08:08, said:
LHO opens 1N (12-14 if it matters)
partner overcalls a natural 2♠ (he did have 2 suited bids available)
RHO passes
you bid 3♣
is this
forcing
invitational
bad hand
Not sure what is standard, but I would expect this to be forcing if undiscussed.
#3
Posted 2014-March-19, 09:00
WellSpyder, on 2014-March-19, 08:20, said:
Same here. Lebensohl is pretty ubiquitous.
edit: a misunderstanding about the situation. Even so, I would treat this as forcing if undiscussed.
-gwnn
#4
Posted 2014-March-19, 09:18
May insist 4S/3NT/5C even after 3S.
Yeah, FORCING.! Any less just lets 2S play.
#5
Posted 2014-March-19, 11:44
#6
Posted 2014-March-19, 12:23
billw55, on 2014-March-19, 09:00, said:
I think you misread the problem.
To me, with LHO opening a weak 1N, 2N by advancer would be invitational to 3N.
As for the OP question, the answer is 'it depends on agreement'. There are sound arguments both ways, but my preference and inclination is to play it forcing for one round, while not expecting that everyone would think that is the better of the two choices.
#7
Posted 2014-March-19, 12:37
Zelandakh, on 2014-March-19, 11:44, said:
Not 100% sure, I play with this guy maybe twice or 3 times a year, for me it's forcing, I'd have to ask him.
Quote
I can be 100% sure that this is the case with this partner.
#8
Posted 2014-March-19, 13:47
#9
Posted 2014-March-19, 13:54
#10
Posted 2014-March-19, 14:10
mycroft, on 2014-March-19, 13:47, said:
There is an alternative to 3♣ being forcing or running. It could be non-forcing, constructive. A lot depends on your agreements as to the range for 2♠. Note, I am not criticizing forcing as the best meaning...it is what I would play. I just think that there are more options than you seem to consider.
The one thing it shouldn't be, imo, is some form of spade raise. I am quite happy to give up on slam after a weak 1N on my left (unless I have a freak), so to me our spade bids are either 3♠ or 4♠ and we can use new suits for.....drum roll, please.....new suits.
If I do have a freak with big blacks and interest beyond game in spades, I bid 4♣, fit showing (and by inference slam interest, else why show clubs?)Edit: splinters may make more sense, but my default rule is that jumpshifts into new suits after we overcall are fit.
#11
Posted 2014-March-19, 15:20
penalty try so a direct 2s bid is preemptive for me since I
would start with x with a decent hand with spades. Using leb
here a 3c bid would be forcing and a sign off or possibly
invitational hand would use 2n first.
If we have 2n available as leb *when the 2s bid is not weak)
then 3c would be forcing since we could use leb to show 3c as
invitational or possibly less.
#12
Posted 2014-March-19, 15:21
There is an alternative to 3♣ being forcing or running. It could be non-forcing, constructive. A lot depends on your agreements as to the range for 2♠. Note, I am not criticizing forcing as the best meaning...it is what I would play. I just think that there are more options than you seem to consider.
..The one thing it shouldn't be, imo, is some form of spade raise. I am quite happy to give up on slam after a weak 1N on my left (unless I have a freak), so to me our spade bids are either 3S or 4s and we can use new suits for.....drum roll, please.....new suits.
..If I do have a freak with big blacks and interest beyond game in spades, I bid 4C, fit showing (and by inference slam interest, else why show clubs?)Edit: splinters may make more sense, but my default rule is that jumpshifts into new suits after we overcall are fit.
*** So some sort of spade raise for a slam try (as 4C you suggest), but NOT as a game try?
"else why show clubs?"
I suspect the close double fit/not GAME tries are many times more frequent.
#13
Posted 2014-March-19, 15:41
Many play a defense against 1NT that allows them to distinguish two-suited from 1-suited hands. If 2♠ promises a 1-suited hand there is of course no need to bid with a non-constructive hand. But our overcalls are wide ranging and responder will more often have an invitational hand than a gf hand.
#14
Posted 2014-March-19, 15:43
Weak hands, even if shapely, do not enter directly vs a weak NT like they would over a strong one. I believe weak over strong and stronger over weak are common agreements...raises invite game, and the NT "cuebid" is needed as natural and invitational when their NT was weak.
#15
Posted 2014-March-19, 16:02
#16
Posted 2014-March-19, 16:25
Use transfer advances in response. This would essentially be transfer Lebensohl in this situation.
#17
Posted 2014-March-19, 16:37
steve2005, on 2014-March-19, 16:25, said:
Use transfer advances in response. This would essentially be transfer Lebensohl in this situation.
While I have some sympathy with this, is not going to happen with this partner, while a good player, even normal Lebensohl is sometimes beyond him.
All you need to know about our bidding is that we bid 3 slams that evening, unlike the science you normally see in my auctions, the 3 auctions were (unopposed): 1♦-3♦(limit)-3♥-3N-6♦, 1♠-2♣-3N-6♠ and 1♦-1♠-3♠-6♠, all made and were decent although you might not want to be in some of them, we scored 67%. Welcome to playing with Mr W, please put your bridge clocks back 30 years.
On this board, I assumed 3♣ was forcing so ended up playing 3♠, fortunately they defended it worse than we bid it (2♠= would have been fine as would 3♣=) and we got a huge board for +140.
#18
Posted 2014-March-19, 18:15
billw55, on 2014-March-19, 09:00, said:
This has nothing to do with Leb. I suggest you read the op again. Yes, I would take 3C as forcing.
#19
Posted 2014-March-19, 18:15
billw55, on 2014-March-19, 09:00, said:
This has nothing to do with Leb. I suggest you read the op again. Yes, I would take 3C as forcing.
#20
Posted 2014-March-20, 04:32
Cyberyeti, on 2014-March-19, 12:37, said:
I think asking him and playing the way he prefers would make the most sense. Using the same structure for both sequences seems like a good idea with an occasional partner prone to the odd memory lapse or two. FWiiW I have always played it the same way as Mike (although transfer advances also appeal) and an additional option that noone has brought up would be to use a similar structure to the one you play over a weak 2♠ opening, with 2NT being some form of enquiry.