• SAYC question

    From Brian@usenetposting@meadows.pair.com to rec.games.bridge on Tue Nov 26 03:30:52 2019
    From Newsgroup: rec.games.bridge


    A friend who doesn't use USENET asked my advice on bidding a hand
    which (being primarily a strong club player) I had no idea about.

    Your agreements are the online curse of "SAYC, pard" and that's it.
    Partner is a totally unknown pickup.

    Your hand

    S AK7
    H 72
    D A7
    C AQJ975

    You hear pard open 1C in first seat, next hand passes. Now what? Is
    there a way to show a (very) strong club raise in SAYC? AFAIK the
    system, inverted minors are NOT part of it, and neither 2C nor 3C is
    forcing (I could be wrong, of course...). Best I could come up with
    was a 1S response on the grounds that it was at least unambiguously
    forcing, might get a useful rebid from partner, and was not going to
    be a disaster if partner raised on 4-card support.

    Anybody have any ideas, apart from avoiding SAYC-only pickups? :)

    Brian.
    --
    This message has been sent from an invalid address
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  • From Co Wiersma@co.wiersma@xs4all.nl to rec.games.bridge on Wed Nov 27 13:55:40 2019
    From Newsgroup: rec.games.bridge

    Op 26-11-2019 om 09:30 schreef Brian:

    A friend who doesn't use USENET asked my advice on bidding a hand
    which (being primarily a strong club player) I had no idea about.

    Your agreements are the online curse of "SAYC, pard" and that's it.
    Partner is a totally unknown pickup.

    Your hand

    S AK7
    H 72
    D A7
    C AQJ975

    You hear pard open 1C in first seat, next hand passes. Now what? Is
    there a way to show a (very) strong club raise in SAYC? AFAIK the
    system, inverted minors are NOT part of it, and neither 2C nor 3C is
    forcing (I could be wrong, of course...). Best I could come up with
    was a 1S response on the grounds that it was at least unambiguously
    forcing, might get a useful rebid from partner, and was not going to
    be a disaster if partner raised on 4-card support.

    Anybody have any ideas, apart from avoiding SAYC-only pickups? :)

    Brian.


    I generally have a rule to not improvise with a mayor
    So I would bid 1D and hope for the best

    But of cause you could well be right and 1S is the better bid in this case

    It is also possible to simply bid clubs: As 2C and 3C are not forcing
    and 4C passes 3NT, the 4C bid can only be a very urgent slamtry

    I guess many sayc players would straight on ask for aces (4NT?) but I do
    not see the use for that with this hand

    So lastly there is the
    <my partner is stupid anyway, so I bid slam myself> option: 6C at imps
    or 6NT at matchpoints

    Co Wiersma
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  • From ais523@ais523@nethack4.org to rec.games.bridge on Wed Nov 27 13:34:54 2019
    From Newsgroup: rec.games.bridge

    Brian wrote:
    A friend who doesn't use USENET asked my advice on bidding a hand
    which (being primarily a strong club player) I had no idea about.

    Your agreements are the online curse of "SAYC, pard" and that's it.
    Partner is a totally unknown pickup.

    Your hand

    S AK7
    H 72
    D A7
    C AQJ975

    You hear pard open 1C in first seat, next hand passes. Now what? Is
    there a way to show a (very) strong club raise in SAYC? AFAIK the
    system, inverted minors are NOT part of it, and neither 2C nor 3C is
    forcing (I could be wrong, of course...). Best I could come up with
    was a 1S response on the grounds that it was at least unambiguously
    forcing, might get a useful rebid from partner, and was not going to
    be a disaster if partner raised on 4-card support.

    Anybody have any ideas, apart from avoiding SAYC-only pickups? :)

    From the SAYC documentation I have: "there is no forcing minor-suit
    raise".

    It's wrong, though: there is a forcing bid that agrees clubs, and it's
    4NT. That's not as ridiculous as it might sound; we know we have a
    9-card club fit (one positive of playing better-minor), and we have an
    18-point hand opposite our partner's 13-point hand. A 9-card fit and 31
    points in the partnership is nearly always enough to make slam, and the
    only potential issue is missing two Aces (or an Ace + the King of
    Clubs). Luckily, the SAYC responses to Blackwood respond 5C with 0, so
    we'll be able to pass out 5C if we are indeed missing the Aces, and if
    not, 6C is probably where we want to be.

    The main disadvantage of this method is that there's no real way to intelligently work out if a grand slam is available (no, the 5NT
    followup is not intelligent when you're in clubs and missing three
    Kings), but given how bare-bones SAYC is, no other method is likely to
    figure that out either. If partner is experienced, they might realise
    that a direct jump to Blackwood is unlikely unless the Blackwood
    bidder has no other option, so the 4NT bid might actually be the best
    way to show a single-suited raise as it is.
    --
    ais523
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  • From judyorcarl@verizon.net@judyorcarl@gmail.com to rec.games.bridge on Thu Nov 28 09:20:59 2019
    From Newsgroup: rec.games.bridge

    On Wednesday, November 27, 2019 at 8:34:56 AM UTC-5, ais523 wrote:
    Brian wrote:
    A friend who doesn't use USENET asked my advice on bidding a hand
    which (being primarily a strong club player) I had no idea about.

    Your agreements are the online curse of "SAYC, pard" and that's it.
    Partner is a totally unknown pickup.

    Your hand

    S AK7
    H 72
    D A7
    C AQJ975

    You hear pard open 1C in first seat, next hand passes. Now what? Is
    there a way to show a (very) strong club raise in SAYC? AFAIK the
    system, inverted minors are NOT part of it, and neither 2C nor 3C is forcing (I could be wrong, of course...). Best I could come up with
    was a 1S response on the grounds that it was at least unambiguously forcing, might get a useful rebid from partner, and was not going to
    be a disaster if partner raised on 4-card support.

    Anybody have any ideas, apart from avoiding SAYC-only pickups? :)

    From the SAYC documentation I have: "there is no forcing minor-suit
    raise".

    It's wrong, though: there is a forcing bid that agrees clubs, and it's
    4NT. That's not as ridiculous as it might sound; we know we have a
    9-card club fit (one positive of playing better-minor), and we have an 18-point hand opposite our partner's 13-point hand. A 9-card fit and 31 points in the partnership is nearly always enough to make slam, and the
    only potential issue is missing two Aces (or an Ace + the King of
    Clubs). Luckily, the SAYC responses to Blackwood respond 5C with 0, so
    we'll be able to pass out 5C if we are indeed missing the Aces, and if
    not, 6C is probably where we want to be.

    The main disadvantage of this method is that there's no real way to intelligently work out if a grand slam is available (no, the 5NT
    followup is not intelligent when you're in clubs and missing three
    Kings), but given how bare-bones SAYC is, no other method is likely to
    figure that out either. If partner is experienced, they might realise
    that a direct jump to Blackwood is unlikely unless the Blackwood
    bidder has no other option, so the 4NT bid might actually be the best
    way to show a single-suited raise as it is.

    --
    ais523

    1C - 4NT does not agree clubs. Proof: 1C - 4NT ; 5H - 6D is certainly not forcing.

    Carl
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  • From ais523@ais523@nethack4.org to rec.games.bridge on Thu Nov 28 17:53:54 2019
    From Newsgroup: rec.games.bridge

    judyorcarl@verizon.net wrote:
    [context: SAYC]
    1C - 4NT does not agree clubs. Proof: 1C - 4NT ; 5H - 6D is
    certainly not forcing.

    I agree that that sequence would be interpreted as non-forcing if it
    actually happened (without prior partnership agreement).

    It's a bad sequence, though; responder should probably start with 1D in
    order to clarify the situation and gain more information. Leaping to
    Blackwood as your first bid is only really suitable when your agreements
    are missing any alternative to exploring for slam, and if you want to
    force diamonds, you have an alternative.

    (For what it's worth, I would typically prefer to agree this sequence,
    showing a new suit above small slam level after Blackwood, as forcing,
    being a choice of grand slams with 7D as one possibility. I agree that
    that isn't a standard meaning, though.)
    --
    ais523
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  • From judyorcarl@verizon.net@judyorcarl@gmail.com to rec.games.bridge on Thu Nov 28 14:29:02 2019
    From Newsgroup: rec.games.bridge

    On Thursday, November 28, 2019 at 12:53:56 PM UTC-5, ais523 wrote:
    judyorcarl@verizon.net wrote:
    [context: SAYC]
    1C - 4NT does not agree clubs. Proof: 1C - 4NT ; 5H - 6D is
    certainly not forcing.

    I agree that that sequence would be interpreted as non-forcing if it
    actually happened (without prior partnership agreement).

    It's a bad sequence, though; responder should probably start with 1D in
    order to clarify the situation and gain more information. Leaping to Blackwood as your first bid is only really suitable when your agreements
    are missing any alternative to exploring for slam, and if you want to
    force diamonds, you have an alternative.

    (For what it's worth, I would typically prefer to agree this sequence, showing a new suit above small slam level after Blackwood, as forcing,
    being a choice of grand slams with 7D as one possibility. I agree that
    that isn't a standard meaning, though.)

    --
    ais523

    You would never bid 4NT over 1C with D 1-suiter. Nor would I. Could either of us trust our partner not to?

    Carl
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  • From Fred.@rollscanardly@twc.com to rec.games.bridge on Sat Nov 30 12:47:30 2019
    From Newsgroup: rec.games.bridge

    On Wednesday, November 27, 2019 at 7:55:41 AM UTC-5, Co Wiersma wrote:
    Op 26-11-2019 om 09:30 schreef Brian:

    A friend who doesn't use USENET asked my advice on bidding a hand
    which (being primarily a strong club player) I had no idea about.

    Your agreements are the online curse of "SAYC, pard" and that's it.
    Partner is a totally unknown pickup.

    Your hand

    S AK7
    H 72
    D A7
    C AQJ975

    You hear pard open 1C in first seat, next hand passes. Now what? Is
    there a way to show a (very) strong club raise in SAYC? AFAIK the
    system, inverted minors are NOT part of it, and neither 2C nor 3C is forcing (I could be wrong, of course...). Best I could come up with
    was a 1S response on the grounds that it was at least unambiguously forcing, might get a useful rebid from partner, and was not going to
    be a disaster if partner raised on 4-card support.

    Anybody have any ideas, apart from avoiding SAYC-only pickups? :)

    Brian.


    I generally have a rule to not improvise with a mayor
    So I would bid 1D and hope for the best

    But of cause you could well be right and 1S is the better bid in this case

    It is also possible to simply bid clubs: As 2C and 3C are not forcing
    and 4C passes 3NT, the 4C bid can only be a very urgent slamtry

    I guess many sayc players would straight on ask for aces (4NT?) but I do
    not see the use for that with this hand

    So lastly there is the
    <my partner is stupid anyway, so I bid slam myself> option: 6C at imps
    or 6NT at matchpoints

    Co Wiersma

    Ely Culbertson's voice from the grave says that since partner
    can lay down 6 holding exactly the right minimum, e.g. Qxx-Axxx-Kxx-Kxx,
    I should invite small slam. Unfortunately, neither Ely nor anybody else is telling me how to make an invitation which will be informative to partner.

    Since small slam is cold facing many minimums with 2 QT, and comes
    down to a finesse with many others, I'm going press to slam at
    match points, not because I think partner is stupid, but because I
    think the risk of blasting slam and getting too high is smaller than
    the risk of partner bidding too little facing an incomprehensible
    invitation.

    I agree with your 1D call, not just because it is a minor, but
    partner is unlikely to hold four diamonds having opened 1C in
    SAYC, while opener is quite likely to hold 4 spades for a spade
    raise. I make it because I want to coax a NT bid out of partner,
    who may hold a lead advantage in hearts, so I can raise to 6.
    If partner obstinately bids a major, I can try again with the
    4th suit, and, again, with a minimum club bid.

    Fred.



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  • From Fred.@fred121572@gmail.com to rec.games.bridge on Thu Dec 5 07:11:54 2019
    From Newsgroup: rec.games.bridge

    On Saturday, November 30, 2019 at 3:47:32 PM UTC-5, Fred. wrote:
    On Wednesday, November 27, 2019 at 7:55:41 AM UTC-5, Co Wiersma wrote:
    Op 26-11-2019 om 09:30 schreef Brian:

    A friend who doesn't use USENET asked my advice on bidding a hand
    which (being primarily a strong club player) I had no idea about.

    Your agreements are the online curse of "SAYC, pard" and that's it. Partner is a totally unknown pickup.

    Your hand

    S AK7
    H 72
    D A7
    C AQJ975

    You hear pard open 1C in first seat, next hand passes. Now what? Is
    there a way to show a (very) strong club raise in SAYC? AFAIK the
    system, inverted minors are NOT part of it, and neither 2C nor 3C is forcing (I could be wrong, of course...). Best I could come up with
    was a 1S response on the grounds that it was at least unambiguously forcing, might get a useful rebid from partner, and was not going to
    be a disaster if partner raised on 4-card support.

    Anybody have any ideas, apart from avoiding SAYC-only pickups? :)

    Brian.


    I generally have a rule to not improvise with a mayor
    So I would bid 1D and hope for the best

    But of cause you could well be right and 1S is the better bid in this case

    It is also possible to simply bid clubs: As 2C and 3C are not forcing
    and 4C passes 3NT, the 4C bid can only be a very urgent slamtry

    I guess many sayc players would straight on ask for aces (4NT?) but I do not see the use for that with this hand

    So lastly there is the
    <my partner is stupid anyway, so I bid slam myself> option: 6C at imps
    or 6NT at matchpoints

    Co Wiersma

    Ely Culbertson's voice from the grave says that since partner
    can lay down 6 holding exactly the right minimum, e.g. Qxx-Axxx-Kxx-Kxx,
    I should invite small slam. Unfortunately, neither Ely nor anybody else is telling me how to make an invitation which will be informative to partner.

    Since small slam is cold facing many minimums with 2 QT, and comes
    down to a finesse with many others, I'm going press to slam at
    match points, not because I think partner is stupid, but because I
    think the risk of blasting slam and getting too high is smaller than
    the risk of partner bidding too little facing an incomprehensible
    invitation.

    I agree with your 1D call, not just because it is a minor, but
    partner is unlikely to hold four diamonds having opened 1C in
    SAYC, while opener is quite likely to hold 4 spades for a spade
    raise. I make it because I want to coax a NT bid out of partner,
    who may hold a lead advantage in hearts, so I can raise to 6.
    If partner obstinately bids a major, I can try again with the
    4th suit, and, again, with a minimum club bid.

    Fred.

    PS. I falsely assumed that since the 2nd round jump raise by
    responder was invitational that raising via 4th suit would be
    game forcing. A more careful reading of the SAYC pamphlet
    indicates that the the non-jump bid in the 4th suit may be
    conventional, but is only forcing for one round. The jump in
    the 4th suit is also ambiguous, but forcing to game. Thus, the
    only strong club raise would be the likes of:

    1C 1D
    1H 2S!
    ? 4C

    or

    1C 1D
    1S 3H!
    ? 5C

    Ugh!

    Fred.
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  • From Steve Willner@swillner@nhcc.net to rec.games.bridge on Thu Dec 12 17:51:50 2019
    From Newsgroup: rec.games.bridge

    On 11/26/2019 3:30 AM, Brian wrote:
    Your agreements are the online curse of "SAYC, pard" and that's it.
    Partner is a totally unknown pickup.
    S AK7
    H 72
    D A7
    C AQJ975

    You hear pard open 1C in first seat, next hand passes. Now what?

    In the old days, I'd have bid 2S, which promised strong spades but not necessarily length. With a pickup partner, that's far too dangerous
    now. Choices that occur to me are 1S, 1D, and 6C. I suppose
    lead-inhibiting 1H is also possible if you are prepared to bid 6C next,
    but that may backfire if your LHO can Lightner-double 6C. 4NT is also possible
    , but I don't see what it gains. Even if off both keycards, 6C should
    make if the club finesse works, and just possibly partner might correct
    6C to 6NT. I wouldn't bid 4C for fear a pickup partner would pass.
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