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One of a Major opening 3 of a Minor Respnse - How do you play it?
#1
Posted 2017-October-22, 18:12
The answer to the question for many will be Bergen raises but what else is there?
Splinter, mini - splinter, mixed raise, strong or weak come to mind. All are relatively low frequency and some produce ugly results.
Looking forward to the wisdom of the community.
Splinter, mini - splinter, mixed raise, strong or weak come to mind. All are relatively low frequency and some produce ugly results.
Looking forward to the wisdom of the community.
#2
Posted 2017-October-22, 18:24
Recently I've been playing these as natural and invitational, with 6+ cards in the suit and denying 3-card support for opener's major. This works well in a 2/1 system, because otherwise these hands get shoved into the NT response.
This wouldn't make much sense playing something where a two-level response shows 10+ or similar, so it does depend on the rest of your system. And you still need invitational ways to raise partner's major. Since we don't play under ACBL regulations, we can include those in a 2C response. Others define 1M - 2N as invitational or better, which is another way to approach it.
This wouldn't make much sense playing something where a two-level response shows 10+ or similar, so it does depend on the rest of your system. And you still need invitational ways to raise partner's major. Since we don't play under ACBL regulations, we can include those in a 2C response. Others define 1M - 2N as invitational or better, which is another way to approach it.
#3
Posted 2017-October-22, 18:46
Hardy raises. 3♣ is a "good limit raise", either 3 trumps and a singleton, or 4 trumps and no singleton. 3♦ over 1♥, the "under jump shift" is a "game forcing limit raise", aka a minimum splinter, 4 trumps, a side singleton or void somewhere, and a good nine to a bad twelve HCP. 3♦ over 1♠ does not exist.
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As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#4
Posted 2017-October-22, 19:40
hawki, on 2017-October-22, 18:12, said:
The answer to the question for many will be Bergen raises but what else is there?Splinter, mini - splinter, mixed raise, strong or weak come to mind. All are relatively low frequency and some produce ugly results.Looking forward to the wisdom of the community.
Previous threads address this topic e.g. this
My suggestion was:
A possible 4-card raise response structure after 1♥ - ??
- 2♠ = BAL or m SPL. Then 2N = ASK: 3♣/♦ = That singleton. 3♥+ = BAL.
- 2N = SPL Short ♠s. Then 3♣ = ASK: 3♦ = ♠ singleton. 3♥+ = ♠ void.
- 3♣/3♦ = SPL. That void.
- 3♥ = PRE.
- 2N = BAL or red SPL. Then 3♣ = ASK: 3♦/♥ = That singleton. 3♠+ = BAL.
- 3♣ = SPL. Short ♣s. Then 3♦ = ASK: 3♥ = ♣ singleton. 3♠+ = ♣ void.
- 3♦/♥ = SPL. That void.
- 3♠ = PRE.
If you don't like forcing 1N (or you are playing 4-card major openings) then consider the following kind of response structure:
1♥ - ??
- 1♠ = NAT.
- 1N = NAT. NF.
- 2♣ = REL. Then 2♦ = ART. Sound. Others = NAT. Weak.
- 2♦ = TRF. 8+ HCP. Sound 3-card raise to at least 2♥.
- 2♥ = NAT. 0-7 HCP.
Similarly over 1♠
- 1N = NAT. NF.
- 2♣ = REL. Then 2♦ = ART. Sound. Others = NAT. Weak.
- 2♦ = TRF. 5+♥s.
- 2♥ = TRF. 8+ HCP. Sound 3-card raise to at least 2♠.
- 2♠ = NAT. 0-7 HCP.
#5
Posted 2017-October-22, 20:16
Anything but WJS, but I'm no particular fan of (vanilla-ish) Bergen either.
#6
Posted 2017-October-23, 04:42
sfi, on 2017-October-22, 18:24, said:
Recently I've been playing these as natural and invitational, with 6+ cards in the suit and denying 3-card support for opener's major. This works well in a 2/1 system, because otherwise these hands get shoved into the NT response.
This wouldn't make much sense playing something where a two-level response shows 10+ or similar...
This wouldn't make much sense playing something where a two-level response shows 10+ or similar...
Why? I've played IJS in a system where 2/1 was F2NT but not GF just fine. The sequence 1M-2m-something-3m then becomes GF.
"Pass is your friend" - my brother in law - who likes to bid a lot.
#7
Posted 2017-October-23, 04:57
NickRW, on 2017-October-23, 04:42, said:
Why? I've played IJS in a system where 2/1 was F2NT but not GF just fine. The sequence 1M-2m-something-3m then becomes GF.
Fair enough. TBH I didn't think much about how I could make it work - I just thought that the sequence you give is typically non-forcing.
#9
Posted 2017-October-24, 02:53
Kungsgeten, on 2017-October-24, 01:51, said:
When can you stop in 2NT? 1H-2D; 2NT-pass?
Not that sequence in the version I played. The 2NT rebid was a good 17+ and GF obviously. 1H-2D;2H-2N would have worked.
"Pass is your friend" - my brother in law - who likes to bid a lot.
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