Saturday, April 26, 2003 9:55 PM

Kokish Rebids

 

PITBULLS:

 

          Sometimes a bidding treatment comes along that is so good that it should immediately be incorporated into an established partnerships bidding system . In my opinion , the Kokish rebids to a 1-P-2♣ auction is one of those . In standard bidding , auctions that start of 1 2♣ are very clumsy . You play 5 card majors so you know partner as at least 5 cards in that major . With diamonds you have no such luxury . The diamond bidder can have 3 , 4 , 5 or more diamonds . Even if the diamond opener now bids 2/2 you are no better off as this could be a flat hand with short diamonds or a 5-4 with minimum points or maximum points . With club raises you do not have a clue either re HCP or distribution . These are very bad auctions for slam purposes or even getting to the right game. Kokish/Nagy came up with an idea that really clarifies & adds structure to these auctions . One basic rule – only the 2♣ bidder can initiate the search for the 4-4 major suit fit ! This one concept simplifies everything as the diamond bidder is no longer allowed to bid a 4 card major . Why mention a major if the 2♣ bidder does not have one anyway ??

 

             With this basic premise of the 2♣ bidder being in charge to find the major fit , you can assign artificial meanings to a major bid by the diamond opener . One basis rule for opener though, she must show a club fit first even if she has a 4 card major. 2 shows a strong club raise as opposed to a weak 3♣ raise . This simplifies slam tries . A 2 rebid shows the difficult to bid 4-4-4-1 hands with a stiff club . A 2NT rebid can show a flat hand regardless of major suit holding . This right sides the NT quite often and makes life difficult for opening leaders as she may have both majors. A 2 rebid can show 5 or more diamonds or 6-5’s in diamonds & a major . The odds are that the 2 rebid will have a 4 card major of course,  as clubs are taken out of the equation. The diamond opener is not allowed to bid a 4 card major so a major bid after showing length in diamonds must be 5 !

 

          A balanced hand in the 15-17 HCP range with diamonds is impossible to have as you would have opened 1NT. The jump to 3NT shows the 18-19 range according to the inventers. Some partnerships do not like that treatment and play 2NT an either or bid showing both ranges. This keeps the major fit exploration at a lower level. Partnerships who play that can define 3NT to be gambling showing a long solid diamond suit with an outside card.

 

            1-P-2♣-P                                   1-P-2♣-P

             2NT-P-3-P                                2NT-P-3-P

             4  ( minimum range)                  4 ( maximum range with Q bid )

 

          The following is a write up from the net on this excellent bidding treatment :

 

 These rebids apply only when the bidding sequence has been 1 - 2 :

2 :

 

shows

 

5+ Diamonds, forcing

2 :

 

shows

 

4-4-4-1 distribution

2 :

 

shows

 

a good Club raise

2 NT:

 

shows

 

12-14 HCPs, balanced distribution

3 :

 

shows

 

a bad Club raise

3 :

 

shows

 

16+ points and a 6-card Diamond suit

3 :

 

shows

 

a Splinter bid in support of Clubs

3 :

 

shows

 

also a Splinter bid in support of Clubs

3 NT:

 

shows

 

18-19HCPs, balanced