Friday,
July 07, 2006 10:26 PM
Weak 2's - 3NT overcall
PITBULLS:
In
“modern” bidding the opponents open “weak two’s” a great deal of the time.
These weak two’s are designed to be destructive to keep you out of your best
spot rather than disciplined and informing partner of the nature of their hand.
You need understandings when you are presented with this problem time and time
again. One understanding should be “fast
arrival” with a 3NT bid.
What
does a 3NT overcall mean after a weak two ? Is it gambling with a long suit ?
Is it off shape with their suit ? Is it a huge flat hand above the range of a
two NT opener ? I think the answer
is that 3NT is a depending on context
bid. The bid must be interpreted in light of the vulnerability and table
position. By table position, I mean whether partner is a passed hand or not. It
is also defined by the principles of “fast arrival”.
I
think what the bid should never be
is a flat hand too strong to
overcall the weak two with 2NT . That is silly as you are destroying one of
your options which is partner converting for penalty or them getting into
further trouble. You are also pre-empting
partner with a huge hand. What is your hurry ? Double first and then
bid NT and leave partner some room for investigation. 4NT is always quantitative in these auctions after
you have doubled. Also if partner leaps to 4 of a major over your double , you
must have the partnership understanding that 4NT by the doubler is not Blackwood . The bid describes the huge
balanced hand that you were about to bid if partner had not leapt to game.
A
3NT jump or even a 3NT overcall should be to
play . If you are vul
and they are not , your 3NT bid could hold a stack in their suit. Your 3NT
jump may be off shape with a stiff in a major . The rule of thumb in these
auctions is partner does not correct the contract unless she has slam interests. Bid quantitatively on these
auctions only. In other words , if
you feel 4NT can make , bid it as
a slam try. Here is a hand from the Vanderbilt. You are a passed hand with ♠Kxx ♥KJxxx ♦xxx ♣Ax
and they open a weak two diamonds. Partner overcalled 3NT so what did
they do ? At both tables they bid 4NT giving the 3NT overcaller a chance to get
to a slam somewhere. The NT overcaller leapt to 6♣ and that was cold.
Going
back to table position again , beware when partner bids 3NT in the balancing spot over a weak two. The bid may
be partially a balance. Partner
should double with huge flat hands
that have any chance for a slam
opposite a passed hand partner. A 3NT overcall is an example of “fast arrival”
and not the Goren notion of the more I have , the more I bid . Doubles and then
leaping to 3NT describe huge hands quite well. Slow arrival shows the bigger hands.