6. Competitive auctions.
Competitive auctions after a 1-suit opening in Kok Canapé are fascinating. Wear a seatbelt.
There are several main ideas that help decide what to do in competition. A lot of these auctions rely to a huge degree on negative inferences, and it takes time to get used to these. Personally I get a kind of soft whiplash switching between this system and standard over how much the meaning of every bid changes on competitive auctions in particular, even though (almost) everything is natural. First, some ground observations and rules:
- New bids by responder are forcing and natural, double is takeout, raises are competitive, the cue is a good raise (but keep in mind that in a limited opening system responder may also choose to simply blast game).
- New bids by opener are natural, though we reserve the cue and 2NT for possible gadgets.
- If opener can show their canapé at the 2-level they will always do so.
- Voluntarily bidding a new suit at the 3-level as opener shows extra playing strength, usually a 6-4 hand (maximum 5-4 hands can make a takeout double instead).
- If responder makes a takeout double at the 1- or 2-level this means 'I want to hear about your canapé suit even if you have to go to the 3-level to tell me'. It denies a fit and promises 3(+) cards support in every unbid suit as well as the opening suit (or sufficient values to control the hand despite a possible misfit). If fourth hand passes and opener has the 11-13 balanced hand they will make the cheapest available rebid of 1NT, 2M (having opened 1M) or 2NT - the single-suited major hands have to jump rebid.
So far everything is natural, though that takeout double might look scary. Actually it's just a negative inference from playing canapé - if partner opens 1
♥ (say), RHO overcalls 1
♠ and we wish to compete, we already have the options of raising hearts with four, bidding a five card minor suit or bidding 1NT with a defensive hand. As opener will rebid their 2m canapé if they have one always, double is used to say "hey, if they raise to 2
♠, I still want to hear about your suit". This is the percentage action with hands as skewed as 2=3=(53), as we now wish to play the (possible) 5-3 minor fit rather than let the opponents rest in their (likely) 8(+)-card spade fit.
A slight word of caution though - this double does promise some values, approximately 7(+) HCP or so in a suitable hand. Opener is allowed to jump rebid with extras (based on shape and playing strength and the assumed fit opposite your double), so if you really have a dreadful 6-8 count just pass and prepare to defend. Facing 11-15 this is a very low risk action, and one example of taking more liberties with passing I alluded to previously.
The takeout double tool is particularly relevant on the 1
♦-(1
♠) start. We have the following negative inferences: partner does not have (exactly) four spades, and likely does not have a spade canapé (and if so, we'll gobble them right up). That means partner has at most 3 spades, so if we have 2 we know they have a fit. Do we want to play 3m or 3
♥ rather than defend 1
♠? If so, we should bid our long suit now or double. If not, partner will compete to 2
♥ but not past 2
♠, unless they hold significant extra playing strength. The same principle is at work on many other auctions: 1
♦-(2
♣)-? and we have a 3=3=4=3 10-count - bid 2
♦! Opener will show their major if they have one, and 2
♦ is likely the limit facing 11-13 balanced with 4(+)
♦ (and it is highly unlikely that opener has got the 3=3=3=4 or (32)=3=5 on this auction). 1
♦-(X)-? with a 2=4=4=3 5-count, bid 3
♦! Unless partner has the spade canapé they've got a spade fit and we're taking LAWful action (again, braving the 3=3=3=4 shape), let them sort it out at the 3-level. For all I know game their way might be cold.
I promised to say something about interference over the strong 1
♣ opening, in particular with regards to recovering a possible heart fit when opener has short spades and long hearts. My opinion is as follows: since opener promises strength, responder should be free to act with shape even on relatively weak hands. Facing a 16+ (not 16 balanced) 1
♣ opening the relevant ranges for responder are approximately:
- Weak: 0-4 HCP (not an ace).
- Invitational: 5-7 HCP or an ace.
- Game forcing: 8+ HCP.
So leverage this. Start bidding with 5-counts. Get your suits in. Bids should show shape and an invitational+ hand. 1
♣-(2
♠)-?, time to make a takeout double with 4 hearts and 5 points. Transfer approaches are particularly effective here, combining a bid below the safety level with rightsiding. There has been detailed and extensive discussion on this topic previously in
this thread and
this thread, and I stand by most of what is written in there.
I also wanted to include the hand from
this post the other day: assuming a P-(P)-1
♠*-(P) start - nothing out of the ordinary so far - responder should reason as follows: "I have 9 facing 11-15, let me look at my outside shortages. Partner has either got at most 3 hearts or 5(+), because with exactly 4 they would have opened 1
♥. If it really is 3(-) then the opponents are concealing their 9(+)-card heart fit while having approximately half the deck, and we likely belong in 3m. There is a good chance we can get there if they compete in passout over 1
♠, and the chance that opener has the perfect maximum in spades while the opponents are concealing their hearts is remote. Much more likely is that partner has a spade-heart canapé, in which case our combined 20-24 HCP plus misfit in both majors means game is very unlikely. On misfit deals stay low, so pass in the 4-3 fit at the 1-level (or, if more optimistic, respond 1NT intending to pull 2
♥ to 2
♠)".