Matchpoint bidding question 6
#1
Posted 2014-November-29, 11:14
#2
Posted 2014-November-29, 11:22
#3
Posted 2014-November-29, 12:29
#4
Posted 2014-November-29, 13:39
#5
Posted 2014-November-29, 13:42
#6
Posted 2014-November-29, 16:11
Winner - BBO Challenge bracket #6 - February, 2017.
#8
Posted 2014-November-29, 23:11
#10
Posted 2014-November-30, 03:07
Anyway, 3♣. Even with a singleton across, I can make a few ruffz.
#11
Posted 2014-November-30, 03:11
Cthulhu D, on 2014-November-29, 23:11, said:
I don't know ACOL, but I would be really surprised if there was any system where 3♥ with 3 cards was possible.
#13
Posted 2014-November-30, 09:20
Cthulhu D, on 2014-November-29, 23:11, said:
I think the principles of bidding in Acol and SAYC are more similar than people here seem to think. A 3♥ bid is a GF in both systems, so while there are minor considerations about what sort of hands P might have responded as he did given that you've shown 5♠ rather than 4, I think they'd very rarely change whether you have a GF opposite his response.
That said, perhaps the main difference on everyday auctions other than what P might raise you on is that Acol players tend to keep their responses stronger. I don't know how much that's conservative English players and how much the fact that 1m openings actually promise the suit, so passing it out is generally less likely to lead to the wrong part score. Probably a little of both. If your P has the agreement that P responds to 1m on almost any strength with a major suit, maybe you want more for a GF, but it doesn't seem like it would apply over P's 1M opening.
#14
Posted 2014-December-01, 19:03
Jinksy, on 2014-November-30, 09:20, said:
That said, perhaps the main difference on everyday auctions other than what P might raise you on is that Acol players tend to keep their responses stronger. I don't know how much that's conservative English players and how much the fact that 1m openings actually promise the suit, so passing it out is generally less likely to lead to the wrong part score. Probably a little of both. If your P has the agreement that P responds to 1m on almost any strength with a major suit, maybe you want more for a GF, but it doesn't seem like it would apply over P's 1M opening.
Not particularly relevant, but I've never actually played either system. The only things I've ever discussed with a partner more than 15 minutes before a session are Precision (first system I learnt from an ancient C.C. Wei book that recommended all splinters as 4441 exactly!), a more modern precision variant, a 2-way club system (and discussion was 'let's read and play these notes and play that for this 4 weeks team event') and 2/1 GF. I've played 56 boards of standard in my life - including BBO pickup pards lol.
#15
Posted 2014-December-04, 04:24
Jinksy, on 2014-November-30, 09:20, said:
That said, perhaps the main difference on everyday auctions other than what P might raise you on is that Acol players tend to keep their responses stronger. I don't know how much that's conservative English players and how much the fact that 1m openings actually promise the suit, so passing it out is generally less likely to lead to the wrong part score. Probably a little of both.
Yes. Another minor difference is that our 1NT response in Acol is tightly limited so we can bid 3♥ or 3♣ here without much risk of making p overexcited. Even 2NT might be an option in Acol, which is obviously isn't playing 2/1.
But I would pass regardless.
Still Acol, still matchpoints. As in other threads, P's opening shows 4+, and may be on a balanced (4n)(4n) outside the NT range (though he should be 5-4 or better after his rebid):