Simple Forcing Question Twilight Zone
#1
Posted 2016-January-18, 02:47
#2
Posted 2016-January-18, 03:07
Note that in general responder should keep the bidding open with ~8+ HCP, even taking false preference if necessary, to cater for a 17, 18 HCP hand opposite.
ahydra
#3
Posted 2016-January-18, 03:31
#4
Posted 2016-January-18, 04:15
London UK
#5
Posted 2016-January-18, 04:41
Playing it as forcing allows the 2♠ rebid to be more well-defined (or you could use it for something different so that all hands with spades bid 1♠) but I prefer to play it as nonforcing. It is good to be able to stop in 1♠ when responder has five points and 3-card spade support.
Think of the alternative: Responder bids again with his five points but since he could have nine points, opener will make a third bid with his 16 points. Now you end up in 2NT with a combined 21 points.
Playing it as nonforcing also means that whenever responder raises spades, he promises four card support. This allows opener to make descriptive game tries because you don't need the nonforcing but forward-going 2NT, 3♣, 3♦ or 3♥ bids for his 3rd turn.
Nonforcing doesn't mean "weak", though. The maximum is 17 HCPs or some modest 18. Responder should never pass with 4-card support unless his initial response was a semipsyche with a boring 3-count or less. He can pass with a 5/6-count with exactly three spades.
#6
Posted 2016-January-18, 07:51
An often neglected point about f versus nf: If 1S is nf and partner bids over this, you have slightly more information than you have when the bid is forcing. You know that he could have passed but chose not to. You can assume partner does not have a 3=5=2=3 hand with a 5 count. He could, and probably would, pass 1S with that.
The above is about the only time when 1S is passed. It seems that there are advantages to letting him pass with that hand but if a partnership worries that they might be missing a game then they can play it as forcing.
#7
Posted 2016-January-18, 08:17
#8
Posted 2016-January-18, 08:24
#9
Posted 2016-January-18, 09:01
#11
Posted 2016-January-18, 12:49
e.g. ♠ x x x ♥ Q x x x x ♦ x ♣ x x x.x. To force, opener can rebid 2♠. IMO woolly obfuscations like "virtually/almost/semi-forcing" shouldn't be allowed.
#12
Posted 2016-January-18, 13:13
Quote
1S. The real problem comes when partner continues bidding with 2H. Pass, 2N and 3C all viable contingent on scoring and vulnerability.
#13
Posted 2016-January-18, 16:21
NickRW, on 2016-January-18, 08:17, said:
I think 1S is ok. I indicated partner would probably pass this when holding at least some 3=5=2=3 shapes with five highs. For example with Qxx / Kxxxxx / xx / xxx. With a combined 23 count, no fit, and and no particular source of tricks beyond my high cards, I am fine with this.
Further, if 1S is forcing I am not sure what I expect him to do. Not 2H, I hope. I suppose he bids 1NT. Holding the strong hand you give me, I would much rather choose my next call knowing that partner bid 1NT because he thought it right rather than, perhaps, because system required that he bid something and 1NT was the best he could do.
#14
Posted 2016-January-18, 17:30
Tools such as mentioned above (Ingberman or lebensohl over a reverse) and with the ability to recover a 4-4 spade fit after a 2nt or even a 1nt bid I see a lot of pairs choosing those bids instead of 1♠. Also, I can't bear to pass if partner opens 1 of a minor and I have a stiff on some real junk but will make a courtesy 2nd call with an 8 count.
What is baby oil made of?
#15
Posted 2016-January-18, 18:11
#16
Posted 2016-January-19, 11:47
Typically, responder passes the 1S rebid only with marginal responding values accompanied by 3 card spade support and either poor support for opener's first suit (or no way to get there systemically - which, for example, might happen if the opening bid were 1C and the partnership plays XYZ). It is rare, albeit possible, for responder to pass 1S with 4 card spade support.
With Qxx, Axxx, xx, xxxx as responder, I would pass 1S.
With Jxxx, Kxxx, Jx, xxxx as responder, I would also pass 1S. This is a really bad hand that was barely (only marginally) worth a response to 1D.
With xx, AQxx, Qxx, xxxx as responder, I would bid 1NT. I have far too much to fail to give opener another chance should s/he be sitting on a rock.
With Jx, Kxxx, Jxx, Jxxx as responder, I also would bid 1NT. This time, I am not really trying to give opener another chance, but rather trying to get to our best spot.
With xx, KQxx, Jxxx, xxx as responder, I would take a preference that returns us to 2D. It would be even clearer to do this holding a hand with better diamond support such as xx, KJxx, Jxxxx, xx.
With Qxxx, Axxx, xx, xxx as responder, I would raise to 2S. I am not ashamed of this response (although I could easily have another Queen or so) and I have 4 card spade support. Even if partner is minimum and goes down in 2S, the opponents likely can go plus in a contract of their own.
With Qxxx, AQxx, Qx, xxx as responder, I would raise to 3S. 10 HCP and all honor cards appear to be working well.
#17
Posted 2016-January-19, 14:07
monikrazy, on 2016-January-18, 13:13, said:
1S. The real problem comes when partner continues bidding with 2H. Pass, 2N and 3C all viable contingent on scoring and vulnerability.
I don't see how Ingberman (or Lebensohl) would apply. Bidding 2S in this auction is a jump shift, not a reverse.
#18
Posted 2016-January-19, 15:31
I don't remember whether I saw it here or on bridgewinnners.com , but most people advocated responding to 1♣ or 1♦ on very little (perhaps 3 or 4 hcp) perhaps even 0 HCP, when you are short in opener's minor.
Now if your doing this to keep out of a bad 1♣ or 1♦ contract you will be passing 1♠ as bidding again will almost guarantee getting too high.
#19
Posted 2016-January-19, 16:01
For me, for instance, 1♠ is not reliably 4-card but is typically reliable as to diamonds. Hence, with 3154 pattern, I might bid 1♠ rather than 2♣ to advertise my 4+ diamond suit (if 1♦ is better minor), and only 4-card if 4144. That allows Responder to better pick between 1NT and 3♦, or to explore a diamond slam, or whatever else he might have in mind. Granted, this is a unique treatment and rare in this sequence.
However, tweak the auction to 1♣-P-1♥-P-1♠. Now, Opener has a problem with 3145 shape with non-minimum but not enough to reverse (especially with the stiff in hearts as a negative value). A 1♠ rebid, perhaps followed up with 2♦ later, works well to describe the tweener hand somewhat more effectively. Maybe 1♣-1♥, 1♠-1NT, 2♦ as 3145 and 15-16 HCP?
On the wild side, I strongly considered, for a while, reversing the meanings of 1♠ and 1NT, in a sense. Thus, 1♦-P-1♥-P-1NT = 4-card spades, minimum, typically unbalanced. 1♦-P-1♥-P-1♠ = balanced, or a number of other possibilities. The downside to this is wrong-siding some 1NT contracts (although you mitigate this by right-siding the 1NT contracts where Opener has four spades); against this you wrong-side 2♠ contract s unless you employ transfers, with 2♣ checkback and perhaps 2♠ as a space-consuming GF checkback (but with less to show). The upside is the ability to relay to 1NT and then bid something else instead, for breaks in the relay, etc.
-P.J. Painter.
#20
Posted 2016-January-19, 16:09
steve2005, on 2016-January-19, 15:31, said:
I don't remember whether I saw it here or on bridgewinnners.com , but most people advocated responding to 1♣ or 1♦ on very little (perhaps 3 or 4 hcp) perhaps even 0 HCP, when you are short in opener's minor.
Now if your doing this to keep out of a bad 1♣ or 1♦ contract you will be passing 1♠ as bidding again will almost guarantee getting too high.
Responding on 0 points is almost always a bad idea, partner will often bid way too high.
If you play WJS, 1H rebid is usually real and no point to play 1S NF.