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2NT vs 3NT openings and discussion within a precision system

#1 User is offline   Shugart23 

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Posted 2024-November-22, 10:59

so, I open 2NT with 11-15 HCP and at least 5-5 in the minors (which I suppose is 'old-school ') . A few questions are coming to mind with this approach, and I'd like to see a discussion on it. 1) would it make more sense to use 3NT as an opening bid to show minors so that opponents are forced to be at the 4 level to find a Major fit and then use 2NT opening to show 5-5- in the Majors? Is 11-15 the optimal range? Would it make any sense for the strength to be unlimited and not capped ? Should the lower bound of the range be lower than 11 ?

I'd be i=very interested in hearing about other's approaches to the 2NT and 3NT opening bids under a precision system
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#2 User is offline   mw64ahw 

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Posted 2024-November-22, 11:13

2N as both minors is relatively easy to defend against so you could try switching 2N and the 3 pre-empt. This then gives you 2N-3-3 as both Majors.
I'm not sure what is optimal in a Precision sense, but I treat the 2N/3C as purely pre-emptive.


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#3 User is offline   awm 

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Posted 2024-November-22, 11:20

In general opening 2NT (or above) leads to an auction with significant amounts of guessing for both sides. You don't really have a way to invite game or sensibly investigate fits outside opener's suit(s). Of course, opponents are under a lot of pressure also, so we want to reserve these openings for times when either:

1. The hand is much more likely to belong to the opponents (so they are the ones guessing).
2. Our side's best suit and level is usually easy to determine.

11-15 with both minors seems to fail on both counts; we could easily belong in 4M if responder has the right hand but there is no sensible way to explore. It's also fairly likely that we want to play game opposite a max opener and 3m opposite a minimum. I'd prefer a weaker range if I'm playing this opening. In fact, Sam and I use:

2NT = 5+/5+ minors and weak (like 5-9)
3NT = 7+ in a major, better than 4M preempt but not enough to open 1 (typically 4-5 losers, 11-15 high card points).
Adam W. Meyerson
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
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#4 User is offline   awm 

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Posted 2024-November-22, 12:53

Our 3nt bid is actually quite valuable; say you pick up a hand like:

KQJxxxx
x
AQxx
x

If you open one spade, your chances of missing a game are quite a bit more than in standard, because partner may pass your limited opening with some 6-8 point hands. You have the playing strength for 1 but very little defensive value and it’s easy to imagine a bad result (or getting into trouble with directors for “upgrading”). The 3nt bid pressures the opponents and still makes it possible to find out spade slam if partner has some controls.
Adam W. Meyerson
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit
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#5 User is offline   steve2005 

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Posted 2024-November-22, 15:34

If you plan on using 2NT constructively may i suggest constricting the range so you have some hope of finding the right level.
So 10-12 hcp or 11-13 hcp.
Sarcasm is a state of mind
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#6 User is offline   Shugart23 

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Posted 2024-November-22, 16:13

View Poststeve2005, on 2024-November-22, 15:34, said:

If you plan on using 2NT constructively may i suggest constricting the range so you have some hope of finding the right level.
So 10-12 hcp or 11-13 hcp.



This is our current agreement:
2NT - partner bids 3C or 3D to play; 4C or 4D to invite to 5; 3H initiates slam search om Clubs and 3S initiates a slam search in Diamonds; any game bid is to play

2NT-3C - Opener can cue bid a Major to show stop and in interest in 3NT; can bid 3D to show interest in 3NT but no Major suit stopped. Partner retreats or bids 3NT

2NT-3D - Opener can cue bid to show interest in 3NT, can bid 3NT showing interest but no stops. Responder sets the contract
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#7 User is offline   DavidKok 

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Posted Today, 03:41

I think 2NT is too high to start a constructive auction sensibly. By requiring 5-5 you decrease the frequency, and you can decrease it even more by narrowing the range, but then of course you need a different way to show that hand type outside of your normal opening range. As far as I'm concerned, needing this openingn is a minor systemic downside.

You mention that your use is very old school. In some previous threads I think you presented other old school aspects of your Precision variant. That doesn't make them good or bad, but I want to mention that a lot of these system bids can't be changed in isolation but instead require more system adaptation. This can be uncomfortable - either you change a lot, or you change nothing, but changing a little will likely not improve matters.

Previously I've written quite a lot about different Precision systems, with particular emphasis on the notrump ladder and the nebulous diamond opening. I think these are pivotal decisions for the bidding system, and other design choices stem from this.

Lastly regarding your question itself: I know of several uses for the 2NT opening in a strong club system. Below are some of my thoughts on each of them:
  • 20-21 balanced (or the likes): I do not see the appeal at all. It helps split the strong NT ranges in 1 and can avoid difficulties in competitive auctions after opening 1, but in my experience this is not that common when we have such a big balanced hand and also we survive quite well in competition with this many values. In return the self-preemptive effect of a 2NT opening is significant, so I prefer to open 1 with this hand type even if it would mean leaving 2NT idle.
  • 11-15 55(+) in the minors: Unpleasant but tolerable. Usually this is played to fill a system gap. Having constructive auctions over this opening is near impossible, so normally you just guess what you might make and hope that the shape information was enough to guess correctly. Some continuation schemes exist but there's nothing great.
  • 11-13 (or 13-15, you pick) 55(+) in the minors: better in isolation than the above, but puts strain on your other openings (specifically the nebulous 1). This may or may not fit in your system. Alternatively you could decide to pass 11-12 hands with this shape.
  • 4-10 (or 4-8, or 6-9, or your other favourite weak range) 55(+) in the minors: plays well, using 2NT as a preemptive bid with both minors makes sense as we're taking away the 2-level while allowing a degree of flexibility in choosing the final contract. The bid has a few downsides for a preempt though: 1) 5-5 is very rare, so this doesn't come up much; 2) we are telling the opponents that either they have the majors or we have a misfit, so the effectiveness as a preempt is reduced compared to 1-suiters; 3) as an artificial practically-forcing preempt the LHO can do all sorts of things like double-then-pass, pass-then-double, double-then-double, double-then-bid etc. so good opponents can convey a lot of information; 4) if we try to combat point number 1 by picking a wide HCP range for the opening, responder can be the one making an uncomfortable guess.
  • Weak (see above for ranges) 5(+)5(+)m: I have never played this but think it is a very sensible idea. We double the frequency compared to 'both minors' and we derive the opponents of their 2 overcall. Hearts don't beat spades anyway so in practice this type of hand doesn't win the partscore battle at 2, meaning that the downside of forcing to the 3-level is limited. We are also not giving up the majors without a fight with this opening. Downsides 3) and 4) above still apply though, and as mentioned I have no experience with this opening. The continuation scheme is easy though, just use the same as you would over a Muiderberg 2.

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