The Next Thing
#1
Posted 2016-May-10, 15:45
2/1 game forcing
15-17 no trump
short club
reverse benji (i know i know - i've tried arguing it)
stayman
weak 2's in the majors
michaels/unusual no trump
jacoby 2nt
splinters/cue bids
transfers over a no trump (3 way)
1430 keycard
inverted minors
carding = standard everything
anyway my partner now wants to expand our range which i'm delighted with, but my question is what is the biggest priority - knowing my partner we should definitely add one thing at a time rather than all at once!
Thanks
Eagles
#2
Posted 2016-May-10, 15:55
lebensohl in general, but most importantly (imo) over reverses?
#3
Posted 2016-May-10, 16:41
wank, on 2016-May-10, 15:55, said:
lebensohl in general, but most importantly (imo) over reverses?
Agree Lebensohl is important, although I think it's most important in 2♥-X-P- or 1♥-X-2♥- type auctions.
Some form of checkback is also important.
More important is to understand your style, how aggressively you open/overcall, what does a preempt look like in each seat/vul etc
#5
Posted 2016-May-10, 18:12
hrothgar, on 2016-May-10, 18:08, said:
already played - should have put in original list
#6
Posted 2016-May-10, 18:14
Competitive conventions e.g. UCB, FJs, NFJs, 2N = good raise, UNT, Michaels, Jump-cue asking for stop, Raptor over a short 1♣ opener.
#7
Posted 2016-May-10, 18:24
These seem to yield some really impressive results.
On a more serious note, I suspect that extending your defensive carding agreements will probably give you the best return on investment.
#8
Posted 2016-May-10, 18:31
Playing 2/1, I would not feel comfortable when I don't have a serious/non-serious bid available.
#9
Posted 2016-May-10, 19:38
In the meantime, you could work on defensive carding.
#11
Posted 2016-May-10, 21:12
It's more important to be able to use the tools you have well than to have lots of tools that you are less certain how to use. Also, every new tool has an overhead in memory associated with it. That burden can have a cost especially when under pressure. So, be judicious in what you add.
I think your partner's one thing at a time approach is a good one. One way to do that is to review where you have the most problems with the way you currently play, then find the tool that helps solve that problem. That's good in several ways. First, you won't be adding tools just to add tools. Second, you'll have a real reason and understanding of why you are adding the tool. Finally, you'll be able to evaluate if the tool has helped and how much it has helped. If it proves a dud, you have good reason to jettison it.
I also agree with recommending Lebensohl. The place I'd start is with the Lebensohl 2 NT response to the double of a weak 2 bid. It does a lot to clarify what the advancer responding to the double has.
#12
Posted 2016-May-11, 01:42
Rusinow leads, Obvious shift, from conventions sf 1NT(if you play forcing), if not that most likely either some lebenshol or gazilli.
#13
Posted 2016-May-11, 02:49
When you get to add conventions I would pick:
Lebensohl
Check-back (whichever version)
Multi 2D instead of Benji
Natural carding is great - no need to change.
#14
Posted 2016-May-11, 03:20
After these, I think you would be best off taking stock and analysing hands to see where you are dropping the most MP/IMPs while your partner builds up some familiarity with the changes. It might well be that you are better off adding depth to your existing arsenal (1NT structure, NMF, etc) than adding new stuff. Most of all, get a feeling for where your partner feels unsure. If you are able to build up their confidence in those areas it tends to raise their entire game.
#15
Posted 2016-May-11, 03:31
Failing that, Lebensohl seems to be the only one from the original list that makes some unbiddable hands biddable.
#16
Posted 2016-May-11, 05:41
Zelandakh, on 2016-May-11, 03:20, said:
Good points - playing in the UK, a defence to a weak NT must be a very high priority (I didn't spot that omission). UCBs are also a must.
#17
Posted 2016-May-11, 06:04
You encounter interference, and you need a way to handle this interference.
Neg. Double handle low level interference quite well, but Lebensohl will help
you to improve the handling of higher level interference.
Also some kind of NMF / Checkback, 3rd suit forcing, but is this uncontested.
You can keep it simple, simple will do fine.
Basically I would go by frequency.
With kind regards
Marlowe
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#18
Posted 2016-May-11, 06:20
I do not think you often want to bid 2NT to play after 1C-1S-2H, so it is natural to find an artificial use for it. Now after 1C-1S-2D you have to decide whether 2H or 2N should be used as an artificial bid, I suggest going with whichever he prefers. And there are other things to be talked out. But I don't see any way to resolve simple follow-up problems without some sort of Leb type of agreement.
New minor forcing has been around forever. (Once called PLOB for "petty little odious bid") He might well be open to its use in its most basic form: 1x-1M-1NT-2y where y is the other minor if x is a minor and y is clubs if it begins 1H-1S-1NT.
As I am sure you agree, it is essential to set exact boundaries. With the pard mentioned above it recently went, in an uncontested auction, P-1D-1S-2D-3C-P. I had the diamond hand, I figured pard had clubs to go with his spades. No, he meant it as new minor. I am ok with playing 1C-1S-2C-2D as a new minor artificial bid but even that I was not aware we were doing. The 3C nmf is crazy, I think. And whether nmf should still be on opposite a passed hand is not clear. Also, I don't care much for nmf over 1m-1M-2NT. After 1D-1S-2NT I might well want to explore for a club slam. Lacking some more advanced gadgetry I like playing all bids as natural and forcing over the 2NT rebid. Incidentally, also after 1D-1S-1NT you might occasionally (but far less often) want to explore for a club slam. Presumably the nmf bid of 2C, then followed by 3C, allows for this. And, if over 2C partner, holding good values and three spades, bids 3S with the expectation you have five, then 3NT shows that the 2C was a slam try in clubs.
I mention these things because perhaps your partner's reluctance is based on bad experience with conventions. Having things written down will minimize disasters, and going to a trusted source (as opposed to me, for example) and playing the convention as recommended by that source saves a lot of time and contention. Mike Lawrence has a CD on conventions, I often try (but rarely succeed) to convince a partner that we could play a convention just as Mike says, how bad could this be. Or you could use a different source, no one source covers everything. Alas, most players know "the right way" to play a convention, they often do not feel the need for discussion because "everyone knows how it is correctly played" and so ...
So good luck.
#19
Posted 2016-May-11, 13:21
convention card stretched to 4 pages(!) It was so complicated that when a conventional
bid was made,the other player had to leave the table while their partner explained the
significance of the bid. They often got in quite a pickle trying to remember all their
fancy gadgets and usually ended up with inferior results. I think that should be a
salutary lesson in taking on too much 'baggage'
- Dr Tarrasch(1862-1934)German Chess Grandmaster
Bridge is a game where you have two opponents...and often three(!)
"Any palooka can take tricks with Aces and Kings; the true expert shows his prowess
by how he handles the two's and three's" - Mollo's Hideous Hog
#20
Posted 2016-May-11, 13:50
PhilG007, on 2016-May-11, 13:21, said:
convention card stretched to 4 pages(!) It was so complicated that when a conventional
bid was made,the other player had to leave the table while their partner explained the
significance of the bid. They often got in quite a pickle trying to remember all their
fancy gadgets and usually ended up with inferior results. I think that should be a
salutary lesson in taking on too much 'baggage'
3 questions before adopting a convention:
Is it effective when used.
Is it more useful than the natural bid it replaces. (frequency of occurrence comes into this)
Am I going to remember it.