Precision: 1D-1H; 1S. How many diamonds?
#1
Posted 2015-September-16, 05:04
#2
Posted 2015-September-16, 05:19
#3
Posted 2015-September-16, 05:19
#4
Posted 2015-September-16, 06:51
#5
Posted 2015-September-16, 16:49
wank, on 2015-September-16, 05:19, said:
The 1D I'm thinking about is where 2C shows 6+ clubs and 1NT is 14-16 (like Meckwell). I have never seen a playerin Sweden play like this though, here a 5+ 2C opening seems more popular. If you rebid differently depending on which style is played, please tell. Here's the two styles:
11-13 NT or unbalanced with primary diamonds or unbalanced with 5 clubs, a 4 card side suit and 2+ diamonds.
11-13 NT or unbalanced with 4+ diamonds (could have longer clubs) or any 4441 hand (could have singleton diamond).
#6
Posted 2015-September-17, 01:13
#7
Posted 2015-September-17, 06:44
Kungsgeten, on 2015-September-16, 16:49, said:
11-13 NT or unbalanced with primary diamonds or unbalanced with 5 clubs, a 4 card side suit and 2+ diamonds.
11-13 NT or unbalanced with 4+ diamonds (could have longer clubs) or any 4441 hand (could have singleton diamond).
Style #1 is the one my pards and I fell into when playing Precision with 14-16 NTs. So in theory, 1♦--1♥--1♠ showed an unbalanced hand (failure to open or rebid 1NT)--but we still weren't sure if clubs or diamonds was the five card suit (we played the 2♣ opening almost always had at least a six-card holding).
Eventually, we found that we hated opening 1♦ on a non-suit when we had two perfectly good ones to be proud of. We started opening 1♠ a lot with chunky four-baggers.
All of which has led me to believe that Hamman is right, and that four card major and canape is the right way to play a strong club system.
#8
Posted 2015-September-17, 13:56
If you play 2♣ shows 6 clubs and denies a 4 card major, you could be 4=1=3=5, 4=2=1=6, 4=3=0=6, etc. which is why you will see some players saying they play 1♦ as showing 0+ diamonds.
#9
Posted 2015-September-17, 16:03
johnu, on 2015-September-17, 13:56, said:
I've seen some people play 1D as showing 0+ diamonds (where 1D wasn't strong). I haven't seen this method you mention though, but rather these:
1. Usually balanced or real diamond suit, but may be 4-4-1-4 or 4-4-0-5 (so 2C is still 5+ suit, but not 4-4-0-5).
2. Balanced or an unbalanced hand with a 4 card major and a 4+ minor (so may be 4-2-0-7 for instance).
3. Variants of 2. (awm play something similar, I've also seen people include 5-5 minors)
4. Unbalanced hand without a four card major (so single suited minor or both minors, could be 3-3-0-7).
5. Flamingo diamond ala Ken Rexford's MICS system: Either a single-suiter in one of the minors, or real diamonds and a longer side suit (or 5-5).
#10
Posted 2015-September-17, 17:52
1. A weak notrump (no 5M)
2. 4441,4450,4351 with any shortness (even diamonds) but no 5M
3. 5+/5+ minors
Of these the weak notrump is by far most common (about 2/3 of hands).
We just bid up the line here, so 1d-1h-1s shows four spades and 1nt denies. We do bid 1nt on some hands with singleton in partners major. We play XYZ (with relays) over these sequences, which seems good since opener is so often a weak NT.
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
#11
Posted 2015-September-18, 11:43
1) What is 2♦?
2) How many clubs in 2♣?
3) Can you have a 4cM in 2♣?
4) Does you notrump range overlap your 1♦ opening?
We play that 2♣ denies 4+M (MAFIA leanings), and we don't use 2♦ to show diamond shortness, so 1♦-1♥-1♠ can potentially be be 4=3=0=6, but more commonly 4=3=1=5.
So my answer is ZERO, which isn't an option in the Poll.
#12
Posted 2024-February-18, 00:28
So 1♦-1♥
- 1♠ 6+♦
- 1NT (semi)balanced
- 2♣ (41)44/(31)(54)
- 2♦ 4441/(43)51
- 2♥ 4414/(43)15
or
- 1♠ 6+♦ or short ♦, 1NT asks?