Bridge Kickstarter Course Lesson 2 Summary

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  • 7/27/2019 Bridge Kickstarter Course Lesson 2 Summary

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    Lesson 2 Summary Notes

    1. Terminologies

    1. Opener: The player who first makes an opening bid.

    2. Responder: The partner of the opener

    3. Support: A bid to show that you have sufficient cards for your partner to establish a fit

    4. Invite: Inquiring if partner has enough values for game

    5. Sign-off: Placing the final contract after obtaining information from bidding

    6. Gameforce: A bid to show that you have sufficient values for a game.

    7. Limit: A bid that restricts the range of points of your hand

    2. Responding to level 1 opening bids

    Our aim: 1) Combined 25 points 2) 8 card fit in the major

    Table of ranges

    Responer Op ner

    Range Name Range Name

    0-5 Weak 12-15 Minimum

    6-9 Constructive 16-17 Invitational

    10-11 Invitation 18-21 Game Force

    12+ Game Force 22+ Open 2C

    3. First Response

    Priorities:

    1. Support (for 1 Major): With support for partners suit (8 cards combined), bid to level

    2 to show 6-9 points, bid to level 3 to show 10-11 points, bid to level 4 to show 12+

    points.

    2. New Suit: Without support, bid a new suit to show 4+ cards in the suit. Requires 6+

    points to bid at level 1 and 10+ points to bid at level 2 (note: even with 10+ points, one

    should bid at level 1 and not jump to level 2)

    3. Limit bid: Make a no trump bid to show your point range. 1NT to show 6-10 points,

    2NT to show 11-12 points, 3NT to show 13-16 points.

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    Example scheme:

    1H -

    1S: 4+ spades, 6+ points

    1NT: 6-10 points, unable to support or bid 1S

    2C: 4+ clubs, 10+ points

    2D: 4+ diamonds, 10+ points 2H: 6-9 points, 3+ hearts

    2NT: 11-12 points

    3H: 10-11 points, 3+ hearts

    3NT: 13-16 points

    4H: 12+ points, 3+ hearts

    Additional notes

    1. Prefer introducing major suits first. E.g After 1C, if you have 4 card spades and 5 card

    diamonds, bid the spades first.

    2. With two 4 card suits, bid the lower suit first. E.g. After 1C. if you have 4 card hearts and

    4 card spades, bid the hearts first.

    3. With two 5 card suits, bid the higher suit first. E.g. After 1C, if you have 5 card hearts

    and 5 card spades, bid the spades first.

    4. We usually dont support minor suit and bid the appropriate NT bid. When we support

    the minor, we use the inverted minor scheme:

    a. 1C - 2C shows 5 card support, 10+ points and no 4 card majorb. 1C - 3C shows 5 card support, 3-6 points

    5. Usually when we have game forcing hand and support, we dont bid straight to level 4.

    We bid a new suit first and then support the original major. This allows for slam

    exploration. The above scheme is an old scheme (in the 1950s) and we will be teaching

    an improved scheme in our club training.

    4. Continuations:

    Priorities:1) Support (for major suit). Support to level 2 with minimum, level 3 with invitational

    values and level 4 with game forcing value

    2) Introduce something new: This can be a new suit or extra length. To show extra length,

    rebid same suit at level 2 to show minimum, level 3 with invitational values and level 4

    with game forcing values. A suit rebid should promise at least 6 cards in the suit

    (except for minor rebids at level 2). Refer to case study 3(a).

    3) Limit bid: For opener, 1NT shows 12-14 points, 2NT shows 18-19 points

    4) Sign-off: Either pass or bid the appropriate final contract. Can pass if partner is limited

    and has already bid the best contract.

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    5. Case Studies

    1. Immediate support

    E.g. After a 1H opening bid, you have support for partners suit.

    2H shows 6-9 points with 3+ cards hearts support, 3H shows 10-11

    points with 4+ cards support.After a 1H - 2H sequence, opener can bid 3H to check if partner has 6-7

    points or 8-9 points.

    2. Support after partner shows a new suit

    E.g. After 1H - 1S,

    2S shows 12-15 points, 3S shows 16-17 points, 4S shows 18+ points.

    After a 1H - 1S - 2S sequence, responder can rebid 3S to check if

    opener is 12-13 points or 14-15 points.

    3. No support after partner shows a new suit

    There are three possible actions.

    a. Introduce extra length: Made when you have extra length. Bid level 2

    with minimum, level 3 with invitational values and level 4 with game

    forcing values.

    Example 1: After 1H - 1S,

    2H shows 6+ card hearts, 12-15 points, 3H shows 6+ card hearts, 16-17 points, 4H

    shows 6+ card hearts, 18+ points.Example 2: After 1C - 1S,

    2C shows 5+ card clubs, 12-15 points, 3C shows 6+ card clubs, 16-17 points.

    b. Limit bid: Without anything else to show, bid an appropriate number of NT.

    E.g. After 1C - 1S,

    1NT shows 12-14 points, 2NT shows 18-19 points. Both shows a balanced hand.

    c. Introduce a new suit: Bid a new 4 card suit. Bid at the cheapest level to show 12-17

    points, jump a level to show 18+ points. Refer to common mistakes on the next pagefor when not introduce a new suit.

    Example 1: After 1C - 1H, 1S shows 4 spades with 12-17 points, 2S shows 4 spades

    with 18+ points

    Example 2: After 1H - 1S, 2C shows 4 clubs with 12-17 points, 3C shows 4 clubs

    with 18+ points

    4. Immediate limit bid

    E.g. After 1H opening, you have no support and no new suit to introduce.

    Bid 1NT to show 6-10 points, 2NT to show 11-12 points, 3NT to show 13-16 points.After 1H - 1NT sequence, opener can bid 2NT to invite to 3NT.

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    Introduce

    Support

    Sign-off

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    6. Common Mistakes

    1. When not to introduce a new suit

    Consider the sequence 1C - 1S. Since responder failed to bid 1H, he is unlikely to hold 4

    hearts. As such, it is pointless to introduce your hearts unless you wish to conveyadditional information. As sequence whereby the opener/responder rebids a suit that is

    at a higher rank and higher level than the first bid is called a reverse.

    The following sequences are reverses: 1C - 1S - 2H (hearts > clubs), 1C - 1H - 2D

    The following sequences are not reverses: 1C - 1H - 1S, 1D - 1H - 2C

    A reverse shows 5 cards in the first bid suit and 4 cards in the newly introduced suit. It

    also shows 16+ points. Hence, the sequence 1C - 1S - 2H would imply 5 clubs, 4 hearts

    and 16+ points.

    2. Introducing new suit at level 2 require 10+ points

    Consider this hand:

    S A98

    H 75

    D 93

    C KJT632

    Partner opens 1H. You do not have a hand that is strong enough to bid 2C as you have 8

    points only. In this case, you simple make a limit bid of 1NT. The limit bid by responder

    does not promise a balanced hand.

    3. 2NT by responder is not used to sign-off

    Consider this hand:

    S A9842H 763

    D 72

    C KJ2

    The bidding goes 1D - 1S - 2C. Some people might consider bidding 2NT to sign-off

    because there is no fit in diamonds and clubs. However, 2NT must show 11-12 points

    (invitational values). With this, just show a preference by bidding 2D (partner usually has 5

    diamonds).

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