Crawling Stayman vs INV with 5-4 majors?
#1
Posted 2016-October-28, 05:24
If we were to use Crawling Stayman we would have no way to show invitational hands with 5-4 majors, so we would either have to treat these as 4-4 majors, force to game, or invite with the five card suit and miss a possible 4-4 fit.
#2
Posted 2016-October-28, 05:46
I would guess form of scoring is a bigger factor than, say 12-14 vs 15-17 NT range.
#3
Posted 2016-October-28, 06:41
Crawling Stayman is certainly worthwhile from time to time. It is one of the few things I miss occasionally from playing a Puppet scheme. That said, it is not really such a big deal if not including it makes the rest of your structure more efficient.
#4
Posted 2016-October-28, 08:08
Zel: 1NT-2♦ is a transfer to heart, but may be invitational with 4 hearts (those hands doesn't bid stayman, unless 4-4 majors). 1NT-2♦; 2♥-2♠ is INV with 5♥ (2NT would invite with four) or GF with 5-5 majors. 1NT-2♣; 2♦-2♠ is a GF relay (shape ask).
#5
Posted 2016-October-28, 09:12
ahydra
#6
Posted 2016-October-29, 10:39
#7
Posted 2016-October-29, 12:08
Zelandakh, on 2016-October-28, 06:41, said:
Puppet Stayman has its own version. With 5+ diamonds, and 2+ hearts and spades, you bid 2♣ and pass any response and you are guaranteed to play at least a 5-2 fit. Obviously this caters to a different type of signoff hand then regular Crawling Stayman but frequency wise it probably is even more common depending on the exact hand patterns used.
#8
Posted 2016-October-29, 17:40
1NT-2♣-2♦-2♠: invitational, 4-5 in the majors.
1NT-2♦-2♥-2♠: invitational, 5-4 in the majors.
1NT-2♣-2any-pass: weak, short in clubs ("Garbage Stayman")
1NT-2♣-2any-2NT: invitational, at least one 4 card major
1NT-2♠-2NT-pass: invitational, no 4 card major.
1NT-2♠-3♣-3NT: invitational, no 4 card major. (3 clubs shows a maximum 1NT opener).
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
#9
Posted 2016-October-30, 02:03
1NT-2♣-2any-2NT: invitational, at least one 4 card major
1NT-2♣-2♦-2♥: weak, 4-5 in the majors.
1NT-2♣-2♦-2♠: weak, 5-4 in the majors.
1NT-2♦-2♥-2♠: invitational, 4-5 in the majors.
1NT-2♣-2♦-3♥ invitational+ 5-4 majors
1NT-2♣-2♦-3♠ GF 4-5 majors
This covers every 54 hand without ambiguity
#10
Posted 2016-October-30, 15:31
In an IMP context (with strong NT...), improving game investigation is more useful. So 54 majors inv (or even just 5 maj and irregular shapes) bid Stayman and correct 2D to 2M. If the auction goes 1NT-2C-2S-2NT, opener should remember to show a 3-card H suit if he wants to pursue. If the auction goes 2D-2M, opener can relay to see if his hand suits responder's expected singleton.
So to anwer OP's question: with your strong(ish) NT range and sophisticated developments you seem to have in place, I bet this should have been dealt with when you decided. In a more standard system, it probably makes less sense to try to escape unless you play a weak(ish) NT and lots of MP events. However, knowing majors length rather than 45 each way is probably a need to have.
#11
Posted 2016-October-31, 05:00
johnu, on 2016-October-29, 12:08, said:
You are thinking of Exit Stayman, which does indeed have a Puppet equivalent. However, most puppet users treat the sequence 1NT - 2♣; 2♦ - 2♥ as constructive, if not forcing, so it is then not available for Crawling (aka Creeping) Stayman.
Note: Garbage Stayman is another name for Exit Stayman but is often used for both conventions almost interchangeably and therefore the Exit Stayman description is clearer.
steve2005, on 2016-October-29, 10:39, said:
A common trick is to specific that one of the majors has to be at least 5 cards long meaning that Opener can always give preference to that suit with an equal length and will have a reasonable landing place with 2-2 in the majors.
#12
Posted 2016-October-31, 07:51
Zelandakh, on 2016-October-31, 05:00, said:
I think if you played it this way you'd be giving up a large part of the gain of the system, which is being able to find 4-4 major fits whenever you have 4-4 in the majors. Sabotaging that for a once-in-a-blue-moon save from playing in a 4-2 fit at the two level seems far too timid.
#13
Posted 2016-October-31, 07:56
Jinksy, on 2016-October-31, 07:51, said:
The primary benefit is playing in the 8 card fit in the very common case of 5-4 opposite 3-3. This is actually the version of the convention that is generally recommended by the more experienced BBFers in threads on the subject.
#14
Posted 2016-October-31, 11:31
Zelandakh, on 2016-October-31, 05:00, said:
Standard treatment is that a 2♥ rebid shows 4 spades, and 2♠ shows 4 hearts. Both are invitational+.
#15
Posted 2016-October-31, 13:33
Zelandakh, on 2016-October-31, 05:00, said:
Maybe common where you play, but IIRC, never encountered by me in the US.
#16
Posted 2016-October-31, 13:35
Zelandakh, on 2016-October-31, 07:56, said:
I don't agree with them. This is one of the things I've spent the most time testing in bidding rooms, and IMO 5-3s aren't that big a deal, either in frequency or in increased expectation when they come up. More often than not getting into 4-3s is worth a trick more than NT, and 4-4s are huge. Restricting yourself to (a specific ordering of) 5-4 hands will drastically reduce the frequency with which you can bid Stayman, and I would guess you gain about 1/2 an IMP in expectation every time you bid it.
Andrew Robson seemed to advocate this view as well in a recent EBU mag, though I don't think he specifically commented
#17
Posted 2016-October-31, 16:26
Jinksy, on 2016-October-31, 13:35, said:
My experience in different. In general, I prefer to play my 8-card fits in a suit contract and stick to no-trumps when our best fit is 4-3.
#18
Posted 2016-October-31, 17:14
Kungsgeten, on 2016-October-28, 08:08, said:
Zel: 1NT-2♦ is a transfer to heart, but may be invitational with 4 hearts (those hands doesn't bid stayman, unless 4-4 majors). 1NT-2♦; 2♥-2♠ is INV with 5♥ (2NT would invite with four) or GF with 5-5 majors. 1NT-2♣; 2♦-2♠ is a GF relay (shape ask).
Obviously, the whole 1NT structure is interlinked, but I don't like using bids as relays when there is a natural and relatively frequent use for the bid. Both to play (based on 5-4 in the majors) and invitational with 5 spades are sensible natural meanings. After a 1NT opening it's often better for Responder to describe his or her own shape rather than ask on FG hands; the balanced hand is better placed to judge whether or not the honour structure fits well.
#19
Posted 2016-November-01, 11:30
jallerton, on 2016-October-31, 16:26, said:
I don't think I particularly disagree - in practice, Moyesians seem harder to play (and/or easier to defend) than 1N. So I suspect playing in them in practice roughly breaks even (at least at IMPs - I would expect to show a slight profit from the Moyesians at MPs). But 4-4s are huge, and all things being equal I would much rather miss the occasional 5-3 if it meant finding more of them (and occasionally we'll find a 5-4 fit when opener shows up with a 5-card major, though that's probably too rare to be much of a factor).
Also because we play a weak NT, getting doubled is a factor, and many people still don't play a double of Stayman as values, so it's useful against such pairs to lower the risk by bidding it more often.
#20
Posted 2016-November-01, 17:36