Is 1-1-1 forcing?
#1
Posted 2015-June-26, 10:51
Elsewhere I have read that opener's second bid should show his strength with a reverse, which a 1♠ rebid doesn't do.
Paul's advice seems sensible, so long as partner knows he has to bid again, even if he has only 6 points and an unbalanced hand with 6+ cards in his first suit, so has to bid 1NT with no support for my first suit, good three card support for my second suit and a singleton or void in his second suit. I don't want partner to pass my 19 point hand saying he made a preference pass as I had not shown my strength with a reverse or a No Trump rebid, and he suspected a misfit.
#2
Posted 2015-June-26, 11:54
In the end it comes down to
#1 how light you respond
#2 how strong a 1 level opener can be
#1 and #2 are related
#2 Raising the upper limit for an 1 level opening removes pressure from your
strong 2C opener.
With kind regards
Marlowe
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#3
Posted 2015-June-26, 12:08
What is the actual hand in the book? If it is balanced, just rebid 2N. If it is unbalanced, rebid 2S.
https://www.youtube....hungPlaysBridge
#4
Posted 2015-June-26, 12:51
#5
Posted 2015-June-26, 14:20
Paul Mendelson is the Financial Times bridge correspondent and a major author on bridge in the UK.
On this hand he writes:
"Many players would jump in spades but there is no need. All possible games and slams are still available and 1S is 100% forcing. This leaves plenty of room for partner to rebid to describe his hand further, or to use Fourth suit forcing to elicit further information from you. To jump here would simply waste your own side's bidding space and make reaching the correct contract more difficult"
I have a lot of books and other resources on bridge but have never heard of this before so thought I'd check it out before raising it with my partner.
#6
Posted 2015-June-26, 14:47
Partner usually isn't strong enough to use fourth suit when you have such a monster. Suppose he bids 2♣. Now you have to do something forcing again on your third turn. 2♦ is probably what you would bid with a 4045 16-18 count. Partner can pass it. 3♦ is probably a splinter, at least it is forcing but you don't have a singleton diamonds.
I am sure Mendelson hasa solution, but for us mortals wouldn't it be easier to show the strength and shape with a 2♠ rebid? That is a game force so you don't have to worry about which subsequent bids would be forcing.
Besides: If 2♠ isn't this hand, what is 2♠ then? A splinter in support of hearts? Would it be 5-6?
It probably doesn't matter much what you agree with partner, though, as long as you both understand that non-forcing does not mean weak. 1♠ has an upper limit of about 18 points. Partner can pass it with 5-6 points, maybe a bad 7, and exactly three spades. With four spades he will raise even with an absolute minimum.
#7
Posted 2015-June-26, 15:29
1♣-1♦; 1♥
1♦-1♥; 1♠
The reason for these exceptions is that I do not want to jump with strong 4441 hands. (And in my style a 4441 hand needs to be very strong before it is opened at the 2 level.) But as I said, very few players will make these exceptions.
Other than the exceptions I gave, I cannot come up with a good reason why a 1-1-1 should be forcing. The only thing I can say is that, in practice, I rarely pass.
Rik
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the new discoveries, is not “Eureka!” (I found it!), but “That’s funny…” – Isaac Asimov
The only reason God did not put "Thou shalt mind thine own business" in the Ten Commandments was that He thought that it was too obvious to need stating. - Kenberg
#8
Posted 2015-June-26, 16:18
Trinidad, on 2015-June-26, 15:29, said:
The main reason one might want to do this is to free up 2♠ for some other meaning(s). Like handling "bridge world death hands" (strong hand, six card minor, 3 cd H support). Or after 1d-1h gaining some ways to splinter raise without forcing to game. Since even when playing 1-1-1 non-forcing, this bid is rarely passed anyway, I think I like the trade-off in theory although my partners have rarely agreed to try it so I haven't really seen how well it works in practice.
#9
Posted 2015-June-26, 16:26
there is a good argument for playing it as forcing - it would free up a 2S rebid for something artifical, for example a strong raise. of course he makes no mention of this advantage. anyway the normal meaning is definitely non-forcing.
the example hand one wouldn't want to jump to start a game force with anyway as it's not strong enough. that the author chose a poor example hand is a clue to the validity of the rest of the piece.
it's very rare that one would really want to pass here anyway. either responder has 6 cards in his suit so will rebid those, he has 3+ of opener's first suit so he go back there and play an 8+ card fit or he has length in the 4th suit in which case he's happy bidding no trumps.
*note for those who object to "he has 3+ of opener's first suit so he go back there and play an 8+ card fit": this style is pretty much universal in the UK.
#10
Posted 2015-June-26, 16:38
#11
Posted 2015-June-26, 16:58
mycroft, on 2015-June-26, 16:38, said:
This is a fairly common way to play it. Edgar Kaplan called this type of opener's rebid "forcing if you have a real response (six points)".
#12
Posted 2015-June-26, 17:09
Stephen Tu, on 2015-June-26, 16:18, said:
Yes, I use 2♠ for this among other hand types.
#13
Posted 2015-June-26, 18:51
I even the 2S jump shift being passed from time to time with a hand that could/should have passed 1C.
xxx
Axxxx
xxxx
x
For instance, he doesn't like being used as a human shield when we're being shot at.
I happen to think it's a very noble way to meet one's maker, especially for a guy like him.
Bottom line is we never let that difference of opinion interfere with anything."
#14
Posted 2015-June-26, 19:57
benlessard, on 2015-June-26, 18:51, said:
I even the 2S jump shift being passed from time to time with a hand that could/should have passed 1C.
xxx
Axxxx
xxxx
x
You would pass a 1♣ bid with this? Seriously?
#15
Posted 2015-June-27, 01:36
Whether you play 1-1-1 as forcing is a matter of agreement. Normal practice is not to play it forcing, but only pass in extreme cases, such as the xxx Axxxx xxxx x hand mentioned. I would not play a jump to 2S as artificial. Learn to bin naturally before you use too many gadgets. Lots of players on BBO seem to know all the conventions, but have little judgement. Just see how many players leap to 4NT just because they have a good hand, without any idea where they are going.
#16
Posted 2015-June-27, 01:56
ArtK78, on 2015-June-26, 12:51, said:
1C-1H-1S and 1D-1H-1S are forcing in Polish Club. 1D opening is limited by 17.
#17
Posted 2015-June-27, 05:55
Stephen Tu, on 2015-June-26, 16:18, said:
That is true, but I don't think that such an agreement would be well suited for novices/beginners.
Rik
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the new discoveries, is not “Eureka!” (I found it!), but “That’s funny…” – Isaac Asimov
The only reason God did not put "Thou shalt mind thine own business" in the Ten Commandments was that He thought that it was too obvious to need stating. - Kenberg
#18
Posted 2015-June-27, 06:23
Having said that, I would jump shift with this hand and find the author's comment to be weak about 1♠ being forcing. It is the bid that most accurately describes the hand to partner, imo.
Having said that, I also agree that a partner who passes the 1♠ bid,better be right. I just would be the 1♠ with a weaker hand than the one shown.
#19
Posted 2015-June-27, 09:43
The big advantage comes from big 3 suiters. Jump reversing on 4441 is very bad.
#20
Posted 2015-June-27, 09:55
Fluffy, on 2015-June-27, 09:43, said:
The big advantage comes from big 3 suiters. Jump reversing on 4441 is very bad.
A jump reverse is normally a splinter; here the alternative bid is a jump shift.
GrahamJson, on 2015-June-27, 01:36, said:
There was a hand on these forums recently where members were virtually unanimously in favour of doing just that.