Are you switching to multi 2D overcall of 1N under GCC
#1
Posted 2015-May-20, 14:47
I was wondering if people were making the switch.
Also possible is to use double as a minor-major 2-suiter with a longer minor (Woolsey).
#2
Posted 2015-May-20, 15:05
#3
Posted 2015-May-20, 15:41
#6
Posted 2015-May-20, 22:39
"It's only when a mosquito lands on your testicles that you realize there is always a way to solve problems without using violence!"
"Well to be perfectly honest, in my humble opinion, of course without offending anyone who thinks differently from my point of view, but also by looking into this matter in a different perspective and without being condemning of one's view's and by trying to make it objectified, and by considering each and every one's valid opinion, I honestly believe that I completely forgot what I was going to say."
#7
Posted 2015-May-20, 23:50
I am certain I have gained far more over the years playing against "reverse Cappelletti", as it is called here, than lost by playing in the weaker major fit at the two level or by not being able to compete when we don't know where the suit is. It's not even close.
#8
Posted 2015-May-21, 01:03
#9
Posted 2015-May-21, 06:33
paulg, on 2015-May-21, 01:03, said:
Is it? I have never heard it.
#10
Posted 2015-May-21, 09:50
sfi, on 2015-May-20, 23:50, said:
The problem with Capp isn't when you use it to show both majors. It's the use of 2Major to show a Major-minor 2-suiter, since that forces you to the 3 level if partner prefers a minor. And if your major is spades, 2♠ preempts partner from showing a 6-card heart suit.
These are why many players only use it over weak NT, you're not as concerned about getting too high.
#11
Posted 2015-May-21, 10:09
Jerry Helms (one of the four people who lay claim to having independently invented "Cappelletti", the other three being Cappelletti himself, Hamilton, and yes, Pottage) recognized early on that the convention has problems, and came up with "Helms II", which others call "modified Cappelletti". Basically, 2♣ is either diamonds or a major-minor two suiter, 2♦ is both majors, and 2M is natural. Later, he and a couple of his regular partners came up with "HELLO" (Helms-Lohman) where 2♣ is again diamonds or a major-minor, 2♦ is hearts, 2♥ is both majors, 2♠ is natural, 2NT is clubs, 3♣ is both minors, and 3♦ is both majors, forcing. Max Hardy thought HELLO is the best defense against 1NT strong or weak. I don't know about that - there are so many defenses. But it does seem an improvement over the basic convention.
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
#12
Posted 2015-May-21, 10:27
#13
Posted 2015-May-21, 10:57
#14
Posted 2015-May-21, 11:08
paulg, on 2015-May-21, 01:03, said:
Vampyr, on 2015-May-21, 06:33, said:
Showing your age paulg
"Robin Barker is a mathematician. ... All highly skilled in their respective fields and clearly accomplished bridge players."
#15
Posted 2015-May-21, 11:18
helene_t, on 2015-May-21, 10:57, said:
I play X = ♥/♠, ♣/♦ or ♦, 2m=Mm, 2M natural over strong NT. I think this is something like Woolsey.
#16
Posted 2015-May-21, 11:47
If playing something simple I think Meckwell is strictly an improvement over DONT, and plain Landy is fine also.
#17
Posted 2015-May-21, 12:00
Vampyr, on 2015-May-21, 11:18, said:
X seems complicated but I guess you have it worked out .
I would go X=majors, 2N=minors, 3m=1 suiter so my brain wouldn't cramp lol.
#18
Posted 2015-May-21, 13:55
blackshoe, on 2015-May-21, 10:09, said:
DONT's biggest advantage is its extreme simplicity. It's arguably the simplest defense that allows showing any 1- or 2-suiter, and furthermore allows playing in one of those suits on the 2 level. It has no two-way bids. I've always found it surprising that it wasn't one of the early NT defenses that were devised. Maybe it's because it took a while for players to give up on the penalty double.
These days I've switched to Meckwell.
#19
Posted 2015-May-21, 14:03
1) many of my partners are chickens and chickens shouldn't play DONT. There are much better conventions to sanely compete for the partscore than DONT if 1100 at Matchpoints scares you. Because:
2) DONT is designed to get you to a safe contract, not a good one. If it's your hand, and you have a major fit, you will almost never find it and go +90 or +110 into +110 or +140 unless you have a lower-suit misfit - and any possible correction will not be worse. This costs a lot - especially at matchpoints. If you're only overcalling on the hands that the people playing the "good, but needs strength and length for safety" systems are, you get the worst of both worlds.
3) It's supposed to be disruptive, but:
- when you have a single suit, almost always you double, and frequently never get to show it - so partner doesn't get to raise it. Almost always, if you would have "disturbed" their auction (i.e. it wasn't going to go 1NT-p-p if you didn't put your oar in), you're not going to get to show it.
- when you have two suits, half the time you're bidding 2♣. Only one in six two-suited hands bids a major (see 2).
- so unless you bid 2♠ (which isn't terribly comfortable, if you play it as the standard bad one-suiter spades rather than good), or the lucky three two-suiters, there's a trivial, non-disruptive, common-to-the-point-of-ubiquity, if not optimal defence: Ignore it (with XX as either cards or runout or never bid, your choice).
So where's the Disturbing?
Yes, you get in when others won't, and win when your contract beats 1NT-AP. Yes, you win when you bid 2♦, especially if others won't come in, or play their minor fit at the 3 level. Yes, 2♥ is magic, but every system worth noting has a call for both majors, so you're back against "either the other tables are passing in which case they have no major fit and we've warned them off a potential 3NT, or they're bidding their majors hand, and have better tools for finding the best contract than us."
I found myself saying "why don't I just keep my mouth shut and hope they misplay me for not actually having an overcall?" a lot; and that's catastrophic for DONT, too.
#20
Posted 2015-May-21, 17:26
TylerE, on 2015-May-21, 11:47, said:
I figured my post was long enough already.
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