1NT - 3NT
#1
Posted 2014-August-18, 09:08
1. What would you take this to mean with a random intermediate partner?
2. What would you take this to mean with a random expert partner?
3. What do you think it should mean in an established partnership?
If your answers to 1 or 2 depend on what your own hand looks like then do your best to explain.
#2
Posted 2014-August-18, 09:34
#3
Posted 2014-August-18, 10:00
With an unknown intermediate I just pass.
#5
Posted 2014-August-18, 10:18
#6
Posted 2014-August-18, 11:41
-P.J. Painter.
#7
Posted 2014-August-18, 12:08
2. Running minor 8-9 playing tricks
3. ditto
Oct 2006: Mission impossible
Soon: Mission illegal
#8
Posted 2014-August-18, 12:40
George Carlin
#10
Posted 2014-August-18, 13:59
PhantomSac, on 2014-August-18, 13:13, said:
The best and safest rule there! My preferred meta-agreement: 3NT in competition is to play unless manifestly impossible. In constructive bidding, 3NT is to play if we have no eight-card major suit fit (may be to play in some sequences even then, but these sequences need to be agreed on).
#11
Posted 2014-August-18, 23:27
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
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
#13
Posted 2014-August-19, 03:19
#14
Posted 2014-August-19, 03:25
Antrax, on 2014-August-19, 00:42, said:
True, you could use them for different suit combinations but obviously that requires discussion. Without discussion I would just think that 3NT is more extreme, and that 2NT is specifically the minors. But if it just shows any two-suiter with at least one major it is probably useless.
Apparantly the concensus is that I am wrong. Anyway, I would never make that bid undiscussed unless 1NT was some kind of transfer opening.
#15
Posted 2014-August-19, 15:09
Zelandakh, on 2014-August-18, 09:08, said:
1. What would you take this to mean with a random intermediate partner?
2. What would you take this to mean with a random expert partner?
3. What do you think it should mean in an established partnership?
If your answers to 1 or 2 depend on what your own hand looks like then do your best to explain.
1. & 2. Natural.
3. It depends on the partnership's agreements about other calls. Is there a hole which can usefully be filled at this high level?
In a couple of partnerships where 2NT means something other than a game forcing 2-suiter, I have suggested playing this as 6-6 in the majors. Why? If you start with Landy or Asptro, there is a danger than partner will pass, (mis)guessing that 2m is the best contract.
Some people can't double 1NT for penalties, so for them 3NT = natural seems the obvious meaning.
#16
Posted 2014-August-20, 00:23
blackshoe, on 2014-August-18, 23:27, said:
Isn't the point of random club games to hone your partnership? Me and my partner recently had a situation where we both simultaneously realised mid action that in completely undiscussed sequence X with interference there was a logical and artificial way to arrange the available bids, but I wimped out from implementing that artificial scheme without discussion, partner assumed I had, and a result we got a poor board. If I had of sprung the artificial bids on him and he got it wrong I'd feel slightly bad, but it's just some random match-points game that neither of us care about.
The line of logic for (1NT)-3NT to be 66 majors in a game going hand isn't torturous, so if partner meant it as that I'd roll with it.
Anyway, random assumptions
1) Strong
2) Gambling style (thinks he can rattle off a bunch of tricks but that they have an easy escape)
3) Probably 66 majors because X is penalty.
#17
Posted 2014-August-20, 01:18
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
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
#18
Posted 2014-August-20, 01:58
helene_t, on 2014-August-19, 03:25, said:
Without discussion, the traditional meaning of 2NT is an unspecified two-suiter in a strong hand.
London UK
#19
Posted 2014-August-20, 04:18
Cthulhu D, on 2014-August-20, 00:23, said:
2) Gambling style (thinks he can rattle off a bunch of tricks but that they have an easy escape)
3) Probably 66 majors because X is penalty.
This was basically similar to how my thinking went. I encountered this in situation 1 and took some time to evaluate my partner. From that I guessed they had a big balanced hand - and they did! I realised that I would still have passed in case 2 but now I would be certain the hand would be different - it has to be some freak that can rattle off tricks but has wide open suits that would not stand a penalty double. In truth though, I would think this auction simply does not exist under these conditions. And for case 3 my thoughts were also going to an extreme 2-suiter, which 2-suits probably depending on the 1NT defence in use. Jallerton's point about defences without a penalty double is also well taken.
In any case, it felt like an interesting exercise and goes to the heart of being a good indi/pick-up partner - being able to judge the thinking of your partner with limited experience. Not interesting enough for IBH and not theoretical enough for NBD - but good for a quickie in General.
#20
Posted 2014-August-20, 11:37