Automatic NT rebid w/ balanced hand Even if you bypass 4 spades
#21
Posted 2011-October-04, 09:06
#22
Posted 2011-October-04, 11:46
whereagles, on 2011-October-04, 06:41, said:
It's anyone's guess whether the pros of walsh style compensate for the 5% of the time that you'll be playing an inferior contract, but the conclusion stands that bypassing spades appears not to matter much.
I would add, as well, that it is perhaps also unclear how often 1NT is in fact the final auction.
For example, one might have this auction:
1♦-P-1♥-P-
1NT-P-P-2♣-
P-P-X-P-
2♠-P-P-P
-P.J. Painter.
#23
Posted 2011-October-04, 15:53
Regards and Happy Trails,
Scott Needham
Boulder, Colorado, USA
#24
Posted 2011-October-04, 16:46
There have been a ton of threads on this, I remember them as being good, maybe someone can find them. Maybe it even spawned a war between me and mikeh at the time
#25
Posted 2011-October-04, 17:22
JLOGIC, on 2011-October-04, 16:46, said:
There have been a ton of threads on this, I remember them as being good, maybe someone can find them. Maybe it even spawned a war between me and mikeh at the time
who? you and me? couldn't happen
#26
Posted 2011-October-04, 19:26
As Justin says, the 1♣-1♦ auction is different if you play this as denying a major unless responder has a pretty good hand. If you play that style, then you won't miss a 4-4 major fit by having opener bypass -- and I think if you play that response style, it is obvious that opener should bypass on balanced hands despite the occasional loss of the ability to play a 4-3 major fit at the one-level. Personally I don't like this style either, but the reasoning is different and has more to do with the infrequency of the cheap and flexible 1♦ response, and with unnecessarily distorting responder's shape and/or concentration of values when opener is strong enough to look for game or slam.
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#27
Posted 2011-October-04, 21:50
On top of that there are a couple of diff versions of walsh so even more confusing.
#28
Posted 2011-October-04, 22:29
mike777, on 2011-October-04, 21:50, said:
On top of that there are a couple of diff versions of walsh so even more confusing.
Yep, just like almost any system; many of us with long-time partnerships started out with a "named" style: Walsh, Hardy, precision, Acol, whatever.
Over the years, we add and change; we adopt new toys and juggle things around. But sometimes we forget that what we are playing isn't the same Walsh, Hardy, or whatever. And when others say how they hate the named style, we get defensive. We shouldn't; we aint playing what they hate.
#29
Posted 2011-October-04, 22:34
whereagles, on 2011-October-04, 06:41, said:
It's anyone's guess whether the pros of walsh style compensate for the 5% of the time that you'll be playing an inferior contract, but the conclusion stands that bypassing spades appears not to matter much.
I think the cons are even less than this. Assuming competent opponents, you will never play 1♠ with a weak hand unless spades is the wrong strain, and you chances of buying it for 2♠ are not good. 1NT is pretty likely at least as good as 3♠ even when you have 4-4 spades.
#30
Posted 2011-October-06, 19:13
mikestar13, on 2011-October-04, 22:34, said:
Actually, my experience is that good opponents sell to 2♠ a lot, even at matchpoint scoring. The risk of going for a number after balancing at the three-level is simply too high. As for 1♠, it's usually a 4-3 fit and not a 4-4 fit. If the spades are breaking, opponents usually won't balance. If opponents do balance, either opener had a big hand (often 18-19 flat, in which case they could go for a number balancing over our non-fit) or else opener had a minimum and we had substantially less than half the strength (in which case we are happy to defend their two-level contract).
It's important to remember that the goal in bridge isn't to declare all the hands. Defending can win if your contract wasn't making (especially if it was down two) or if the opponents contract doesn't make (especially if you find a double). It's much better to (attempt to) play in 1♠ on 18 high than in 1NT: you are more likely to make it, and opponents are less likely to penalize when you are going down.
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit