mikeh, on May 6 2007, 10:55 AM, said:
jillybean2, on May 6 2007, 10:18 AM, said:
mikeh, on Apr 22 2007, 07:27 PM, said:
Hi Mike,
One sequence not mentioned here is 1♦:2♣ 3♣
I never see it discussed, I dont think its a great bid but I do use it with 3 card support and no other bid available.
Good, bad, terrible, does anyone use it?
Sorry, jb, but in my view, this is 'terrible'
Most (I would say 'all' but experience shows that this would be an overbid) require some degree of extra values for a minor suit raise. The problem is that you have to be able to create a force, when you hold a fit and some extra values, below 3N: the most likely game.
This constraint, of staying below 3N on good but not huge hands (on huge hands, we can, in a well-designed method, force beyond 3N right away because we will be able to stop in 4N or 5 minor when slam proves too much), means that we need a way to show a fit and create a force, and the default method is the single raise.
This, in turn, means that we cannot/should not raise to 3♣ on mediocre hands with 3♣s.
Now, I am not a fan of SAYC or similar systems, in part because the methods force you into all kinds of distortions with various not-especially-rare hand types, this being one of them. So what do you bid with, say KJx xxx AKxx Qxx?
Some would say that you have to rebid 2N: an ugly choice: imagine partner with Ax Kx xxx AKJxxx: now we have wrong-sided 3N: we will still make much of the time, but it is frigid from partner's side.
My preference, as described earlier, is that 2♦ is a 'noise', a 'mark-time' bid, denying the ability to make a more descriptive systemic bid. This is not ideal, and others have developed other compromises.
BTW, while I dislike SAYC, it would be naive to think that any system has yet been invented, or will ever be invented, that is free from the need to create kludges to ameliorate similar issues.
Going back to where I began, 'extra values' can be in the form of shape as well as or instead of hcp.. but remember that responder will often be bidding 2♣ on some fairly flat hands and modest hcp... partner has no forcing ♦ raise and may have a hand just a bit too good for 1N and not good enough (not the right stoppers, for example) for 2N.
Trying not to repeat old mistakes, what do you bid here 2♥?
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West North East South
- - - 1♥
Pass 2♣ Pass ?

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ing) tr. v. - Any bid made by bridge player with which partner disagrees.