Posted 2024-June-07, 12:38
One of the issues raised by the OP, in later posts, is how to make a decision after a bidding sequence in which opener showed a balanced 11-14…1m 1M 1N.
As I understand it, historically a 1N opener was 16-18, and people passed most flat 12 counts in 1st and 2nd seat.
Experts recognized (eventually) that it was far better to open most 12 counts, but doing so meant that the notrump rebid went from 13-15 to 12-15. A 4 point range is problematic. Responder has to invite with hands where game has decent chances opposite 14-15 but those hands will generate minus scores fairly often when opener has 12-13…not ‘most of the time’ but enough to be a concern.
In addition, back then, bidding methods were getting more sophisticated, and responding structures over a strong 1N were some of the earlier ‘good ideas’ discovered or invented. Accordingly it became popular to use 15-17 1N, which remains the default (in the strong 1N community) to this day.
However, just as in the 1970’s players began seeing a 12 count opener as normal, on flat hands, nowadays most players, at all levels beyond beginner, open a lot of 11 counts. When one does so and still uses 15-17 1N openings, one has reinvented the problem that the old 16-18 range created once 12 count openings became normal…the 1N rebid is too wide a range.
This is, imo, part of the rationale behind an increasing move, especially amongst advanced and expert pairs, to use a 14-16 1N opening range. That allows the 1N rebid to be 11-13, which is a much easier range for responder to cater to in his invite or pass decision.
A difference of 1 hcp may not seem like much but my experience suggests it’s an important factor. One of my former partners liked a 11-14 1€N opening. I played it because I generally play what my partner prefers, but I hated it. We had too many 2N down 1. You hold a balanced 11 count and it’s dangerous to pass because, with balanced hand opposite balanced hand, 3N will make around 50% of the time if opener has 13-14, but 2N will fail fairly often when opener has the more likely 11.
So if you’re looking for guidance on how to resolve the invite or pass decision, when opener rebids 1N, you have three choices. One: accept that you’re going to guess wrong (either in deciding whether to invite or whether to accept partner’s invite) more often than you would like….your methods cause the issue…or switch to 14-16 1N, allowing the rebid to be 11-13, or stop opening flat 11 counts.
On that last point: in my current main partnership, we open very aggressively. We basically never pass 11 counts, open a lot of shapely 10 counts, and we play 10-13 1N not vulnerable (14-16 vul). The 10-13 violates my preference for a 3 point range but partner was opening 10 counts when our agreement was 11-13, and it was easier just to make it systemic (and avoiding having to announce ‘11-13 but he does it with 10 as well).
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