Posted 2024-October-31, 13:03
There are times, such as on reading this thread, that I despair of ever contributing again.
I see all kinds of frankly bizarre suggestions. The OP is looking for what are actually very basic concepts.
Firstly, I do agree with everyone who observed that with 4 spades, longer clubs, and gf values the correct response is 2C. That’s about as basic as it gets and it’s correct in any natural method, including non 2/1 methods. Standard American and similar methods also use 2C then 2S (a reverse, so gf even if 2C were not gf) to show 4+ spades, longer clubs and game+ values.
Then I see suggestions that 3H shows 7+ hearts. Makes me want to bang my head against the nearest wall. Or that people should open 2C with xxx AKQ10xxx KQJ void. More head-banging looms. Wtf?????
Now, as for 1H 2C 3H I’m not saying the normal 2/1 approach is universal. But in the circles in which I play 3H shows a no loser 6+ heart suit….absolutely not AQJxxxx….and about a King or more than the 1H bid promised. One is consuming bidding space…a concept few below the expert level seem to even dimly grasp…in a completely unobstructed game force sequence, so the bid should be (a) rare and (b) closely constrained. Moreover, it becomes very difficult for responder to show or deny a missing honour if 3H might not show a solid suit. Most (all of my acquaintance with whom I’ve discussed it) say ‘3H sets trump….even the stiff deuce is good support….let’s go slam hunting if one’s hand outside of hearts….known to be no loser….is suitable’.
The next question that every serious or improving player needs to discuss with partner is ‘how many hearts does 1H 2C 2H show’.
There is NO ‘right’ answer, but there are two main schools of thought and a number of idiosyncratic treatments. Let’s ignore the latter….they require specific agreement and always contain potential issues that require significant additional discussion and none of them are remotely close to ‘standard’.
So the two schools of thought. 2H promises 6+. The default rebid with any 5332 minimum opening bid is 2N
Pro: ensures that responder can agree on hearts with a doubleton. Con: responder will often bid some number of notrump, leaving opener on play with a hopeless holding in the suit they lead. Imagine you have 9 quick winners but one suit is Kx opposite xxx. Would you rather play from Kx….can’t go down…or xxx…need luck?
2H doesn’t promise extra length, could be Jxxxx! 2N, instead, promises some values in both unbid suits. Pro: avoids the silly wrong-siding of notrump. Con…it can be near-impossible to find out whether one has an eight as opposed to a seven card heart fit.
There is, imo, no ‘right’ answer. Personally I play the second style but good friends of mine, experts, play the former. As it happens, in my main partnership we pkay a strange system that avoids these problems, but at the cost of additional complexity so I’m not going to discuss further.
Next…1H 2C 2H (whether 5+ or 6+) 2S. Basic bridge. All good players not playing their own weird artificial bids agree that this shows 4+ spades and longer clubs.
Let me add one clarification. Some pairs, I play in one, will consider responding 2C on 4=4 blacks. Why? Because 1H 1S 2H or 1H 1S 2D are awkward auctions since responder has no convenient natural gf. Say you are 4=3=2=4…1H 1S 2H…..how do you make a forcing raise in hearts, especially if you have even mild interest in slam? But I digress…I’m straying into an esoteric area. For the purposes of this discussion, 2C then 2S shows 4+ spades and longer clubs, with game going (or better) values.
Why do I say 4+ spades? Because, while rare, one can pick up 5 spades, 6 clubs and a good hand. Bid 2C then bid spades twice. Every time you rebid spades you say two things….the first rebid…so the second spade bid…shows an ‘extra’ spade….and because 2C promised longer spades than clubs (in mainstream bidding) showing a fifth spade also shows at least 6 clubs!
With the hand given….Axx AK10xxx KQ xx opposite KJ10x J A AK10xxxx
1H 2C 2H. The hand is strong enough for 3H but the heart suit is far too weak. Make it Axx AKQ10xx Kx xx and I’d do it, while inwardedly unhappy about the missing heart J.
1H 2C 2H 2S
If 2H promised 6+, I can bid a ‘waiting’ 2N, confident that partner can and will show me his doubleton heart if he has it…he is no flatter than 4=2=2=5 so raising 2N would be silly
If 2H were ambiguous on heart length, I’d bid 3H, not liking it because I am going to be torn over 3N…I think I have to bid 4N because I have an ace more than I’ve shown.
As it is, responder has a huge hand and needs to show his shape and power, so bids 4C over 3H and 3C over 2N….both show at least 6 clubs and doubt about either level or strain or both. (Btw, it’s common, if not universal, to play that 1H 2C 2H 2S 2N 4C shows a no loser 6+ club suit and some extras… a very useful thing for slam bidding)
The auctions diverge at that point, depending on opener’s rebid, but all auctions should get to slam….probably 6C, second choice 6N, third choice 6H (if opener shows extras with 6 heaets, that stiff heart jack gains in significance, but I’d rate getting to hearts as unlikely).
The internet is both great and horrible for offering advice on issues such as these. It’s great because one can hope to ask questions and get informed answers. It’s horrible because, to someone not far advanced in the game, it can be very difficult to know whose advice to trust. Obviously that could apply to my advice😀
But I doubt you’ll find anyone here prepared to argue with what I’ve written above. Oh…if any grand makes, don’t worry about missing it. None of the possible grands are ‘good’ in that you need luck in at least one suit. Never worry about missing borderline grands.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari