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New colour after a w2 opening bid Meaning

#1 User is offline   42 

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Posted 2011-December-19, 17:24

Hi,

I used to play that a new suit after a w2 opening is forcing. Actually we have a discussion whether this is good or bad, and with which hands one bids it.

How do YOU play it?

TIA!
Caren
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#2 User is offline   Cyberyeti 

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Posted 2011-December-19, 17:48

 42, on 2011-December-19, 17:24, said:

Hi,

I used to play that a new colour after a w2 opening is forcing. Actually we have a discussion whether this is good or bad, and with which hands one bids it.

How do YOU play it?

TIA!
Caren

I play them non forcing but constructive, which IMO is the way to play them if your weak 2s are very wide ranging as ours are. If you play 6-10 6 card suit, you are probably better off playing them forcing.
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#3 User is offline   Flameous 

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Posted 2011-December-19, 17:52

2M bids NF but constructive. Could be weaker with support for partners suit.
To force must bid on the 3 lvl.

Standard is that all new suits are forcing.
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#4 User is offline   TWO4BRIDGE 

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Posted 2011-December-19, 18:19

Playing it Forcing gives you an extra try at the best game contract when Responder has a good hand.
Example:
2D - 2S ( forcing, RONF )
??
...2NT! = x x x tripleton or A x, K x, Q x honor-doubleton
...3S = honor-tripleton
...3C = none of above , but "feature" ( A or K; if agreed, may also be Q )
...3H = " " " " feature
...3D = none of above
...3NT = " " " but A K Q x x x of

Note: the 3C and 3H replies are the same as if 2NT! ( feature-ask) were used
by Responder, but has at most x x in Responder's Major.
Don Stenmark
TWOferBRIDGE
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#5 User is offline   the hog 

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Posted 2011-December-19, 22:06

I play them as forcing. This makes far more sense to me rather than guessing whether opener has a good or bad weak 2.
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#6 User is offline   aguahombre 

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Posted 2011-December-19, 22:35

RONF is the norm. Our style is that the bid may or may not be natural, but opener's obligation is to show her length in the new suit. Rebid of orig suit=stiff or void; cheapest NT=doubleton. 3rd suit=feature with 3-cards in 2nd suit; raise= 3 card support, etc.

This works better when our weak 2 bids are disciplined. If the new suit was not natural, responder was looking for shortness there.
"Bidding Spades to show spades can work well." (Kenberg)
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#7 User is offline   peachy 

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Posted 2011-December-19, 23:47

I like it natural and forcing, particularly if the weak 2's are fairly disciplined.
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#8 User is offline   Free 

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Posted 2011-December-20, 00:08

I don't see much merit in playing the NF (weak, constructive, whatever). Playing them as 1 round force helps us to find a better contract, find a game and even find slams. I've had some great hands where a natural bidding was much easier than having to jump or bid 2NT, while I can't remember a situation where I would've liked to bid 2X NF.
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#9 User is offline   FrancesHinden 

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Posted 2011-December-20, 03:07

99% of the time partner opens a weak two in a major you pass, raise or bid 3NT. So it doesn't actually matter that much what you play.

In one partnership I play 2-level non-forcing but constructive, 3-level forcing
In the other partnership I play 2-level forcing, and transfers from 2NT upwards (but we don't play a weak 2D)

The 2-major response to a weak 2D comes up reasonably often, and the non-forcing meaning is useful.
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#10 User is online   Cascade 

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Posted 2011-December-20, 03:20

We play very wide ranging weak twos especially not vulnerable.

We often have to rescue ourselves from our weak twos so that works well.

Marty Bergen wrote about non forcing new suits in Better Bidding with Bergen Volume One pg 112.

Quote

We use new suits as nonforcing corrections, which I feel so strongly about that I would play them even if our weak-two bids were disciplined.

Wayne Burrows

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#11 User is offline   the_clown 

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Posted 2011-December-20, 04:01

I like to play transfers here.
2-?

2NT s
3 -s
3- s
3s- raise, invitational or better.

Not sure if its popular, but it works pretty well, we are able to improve the paarscore, as well as well as to bid constructively. And no we dont miss Ogust.
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