helene_t, on 2023-April-15, 04:57, said:
I played a congress event with Cascade in New Zealand, we played this NT ladder:
11-12: open 1M if you have one, otherwise pass (maybe 1♦ in 3rd seat if you have 4 good diamonds)
13-15: 1NT
16-22: 1c
I worked quite well but I wondered if the frequency of 1M of a 4card suit was too low to bother.
In modern Precision the opening structure is (similar to):
- 1♣: 16+ unbal or 17+ bal
- 1♦: 11-15, 2(+) diamonds
- 1♥: 11-15, 5(+) hearts
- 1♠: 11-15, 5(+) spades
- 1NT: 14-16 (semi)bal, typically contains more semibalanced hands than traditional 1NT openings
- 2♣: 11-15 6(+)♣, no 5cM
- 2♦: 11-15 '4=4=1=5 minus a card'
Personally I think strong club systems are very interesting, and Precision(-esque) systems have an edge over standard systems. One of the issues with the standard modern Precision system can be identified very easily. If we set 1M as a 5cM, 2♣ as 6(+) and 1♣ as 16+ any shape, the 11-15 4=4=0=5 hands (and those similar to it) have no good bid. The main solution is a nebulous diamond of some sort. This bumps the frequency of 1♦ sky high - including diamonds hands, weak balanced hands and unbalanced hands (possibly short diamonds) that have no good place in the system - while making it vulnerable to interference.
One older alternative is to play 4cM instead, which prompted this post. Compared to the scheme above the problem hand is much more gentle now: 3=3=2=5 (no 4cM and no 6c♣) is balanced and doesn't have a lot of playing strength, so it is much less difficult to fold into the opening structure than the 4=4=0=5-like or (41)=3=5 or so hands. In addition opening 1M with a weak (11-13) notrump with a 4cM greatly reduces pressure on 1♦ and has a mildly preemptive effect, while responder won't easily get too high facing a limited opening. In fact, if we are a bit naive for a second, we can glue together:
- 1♣: 16+ unbal or 17+ bal
- 1♦: 11-15, 4(+) diamonds
- 1♥: 11-15, 4(+) hearts
- 1♠: 11-15, 4(+) spades
- 1NT: 14-16 (semi)bal, typically contains more semibalanced hands than traditional 1NT openings
- 2♣: 11-15 6(+)♣, no 5cM
I've recently become very interested in these systems. Canapé style strong club 4cM systems solve a lot of the problems that natural system have, and incur only minor costs in return. The idea of simply passing the 11-13 (or 11-12, if you shift 1NT down to 13-15) balanced hands without a 4cM is wild but not outlandish, alternatively dropping 1♦ down to 3(+) seems perfectly playable as well (and you have to DSI with 3=3=2=5). Also the response structure can be simple and effective. In playing around with this I also looked at the opening frequencies (of one particular flavour of system of this type, so this would probably change quite a bit depending on exact system choices), and was pleasantly surprised:
Over the past weeks I've assembled a pretty decent literature list of strong club 4cM systems. If people have experience with systems like this, in particular if you are familiar with interesting bidding tricks that go together with systems like this, I'd love to hear all about them.