Muiderberg Two-Bids What is the recommended defence?
#1
Posted 2012-June-10, 01:56
In this thread Euro 2012 Systems 54 pairs are playing some form of Multi so presumably they are playing Muiderberg as well.
#3
Posted 2012-June-10, 04:38
By the way, just because a pair plays multi, it does not necessarily mean they play muiderberg too.
#4
Posted 2012-June-10, 06:02
32519, on 2012-June-10, 01:56, said:
Where do you come up with these ideas?
Did you ever consider taking the time to look at some of the system cards being used and see what folks are actually playing?
#5
Posted 2012-June-10, 17:45
hrothgar, on 2012-June-10, 06:02, said:
Did you ever consider taking the time to look at some of the system cards being used and see what folks are actually playing?
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As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
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#6
Posted 2012-June-10, 23:45
manudude03, on 2012-June-10, 04:38, said:
I fully accept this but Muiderberg Twos are a powerful option to use for the freed up 2♥ and 2♠ bids. I never checked what the 54 Multi pairs are doing with these bids but at least some of them must be using Muiderberg.
I ran a number of random hands through BBOs deal generator and was surprised to see how often it dealt a double fit in openers two suits (or at least a partial double fit). When responder has a good hand and a known fit in one of openers two suits, what would a typical auction look like in search of a double fit and a possible slam?
Here is an example hand dealt by BBOs deal generator: With this hand North already knows there is a double fit. So how would the auction typically continue?
#7
Posted 2012-June-11, 00:15
#8
Posted 2012-June-11, 09:05
32519, on 2012-June-10, 23:45, said:
I ran a number of random hands through BBOs deal generator and was surprised to see how often it dealt a double fit in openers two suits (or at least a partial double fit). When responder has a good hand and a known fit in one of openers two suits, what would a typical auction look like in search of a double fit and a possible slam?
Here is an example hand dealt by BBOs deal generator: With this hand North already knows there is a double fit. So how would the auction typically continue?
Here is a "disciplined" Muiderberg treatment which Zel might appreciate ( contains RELAYS for some of the options ) :
2S! - 2NT! ( asks for minor )
3C - ??
...... 3D! = GF, agrees ♣
...... 3H = GF, my own suit, asks for support
...... 3S = GF, sets ♠ as trump, asks distribution
...... 3NT/4S/5C = to play
...... 4C! = double-fit ; asks distribution
After :... - 4C!
??
.. 4D! = ♦ shortness ( stiff or void )
.. 4H! = ♥ shortness ( stiff or void )
.. 4S = no shortness ( 5 2 2 4 )
After:
4D! - 4NT ( 6 Ace-RKC including ♠Q but not ♣Q )
5H ( 2 - ♠Q ) - 6S ( no RED losers, 5 of 6 key cards, both black Q )
TWOferBRIDGE
"imo by far in bridge the least understood concept is how to bid over a jump-shift
( 1M-1NT!-3m-?? )." ....Justin Lall
" Did someone mention relays? " .... Zelandakh
K-Rex to Mikeh : " Sometimes you drive me nuts " .
#9
Posted 2012-June-11, 11:19
"However, strangely
enough, the 2♥ and 2♠ Tartan Twos suffer an average loss of -
0.31."
"...the most damning
feature of the opening is the fact that its users dedicate the 2♥
and 2♠ openings to weak two suiters with five card in the bid
major and a minor and those openings present a heavy negative
IMP outcome."
"The data includes all the deals played in the European Championships from 1997 to 2004 and the knock-out stages of Olympics
and World Championships from 1987 to 2003, whenever there
are comparisons from all tables in play."
[Tartan Two is like Muiderberg]
- R. Buckminster Fuller
#10
Posted 2012-June-11, 12:05
Two Spades openers
39 Weak Two Bid
22 Muiderberg (5 spades, 4+ minor)
17 Polish (5 spades, 5 minor)
10 Constructive Weak Two
4 Acol Strong Two Bid (8 playing tricks in spades)
1 NV Muiderberg V weak
6 Others
#11
Posted 2012-June-11, 16:05
paulg, on 2012-June-11, 12:05, said:
Two comments:
1. This doesn't tell the whole story as it is perfectly reasonable to play e.g. 2♠ as spades and a minor and 2♥ as both majors.
2. Some people play 2♥ as hearts and a minor, some as hearts and any other suit. I consider the latter significantly worse.
-- Bertrand Russell
#12
Posted 2012-June-11, 18:16
mgoetze, on 2012-June-11, 16:05, said:
1. This doesn't tell the whole story as it is perfectly reasonable to play e.g. 2♠ as spades and a minor and 2♥ as both majors.
2. Some people play 2♥ as hearts and a minor, some as hearts and any other suit. I consider the latter significantly worse.
The most common multi paring seems to be garbage multi with 3-8 going through 2D and direct being 9-11. This probably warrants a different defence. Presumably the 2M is quite pure and the 2D is insane.
#13
Posted 2012-June-11, 23:32
TWO4BRIDGE, on 2012-June-11, 09:05, said:
2S! - 2NT! ( asks for minor )
3C - ??
...... 3D! = GF, agrees ♣
...... 3H = GF, my own suit, asks for support
...... 3S = GF, sets ♠ as trump, asks distribution
...... 3NT/4S/5C = to play
...... 4C! = double-fit ; asks distribution
After :... - 4C!
??
.. 4D! = ♦ shortness ( stiff or void )
.. 4H! = ♥ shortness ( stiff or void )
.. 4S = no shortness ( 5 2 2 4 )
After:
4D! - 4NT ( 6 Ace-RKC including ♠Q but not ♣Q )
5H ( 2 - ♠Q ) - 6S ( no RED losers, 5 of 6 key cards, both black Q )
+1 for this suggestion of yours.
How would your auction change with the red and black suit holdings reversed in both opener's and responder's hands? You still have a double suit fit.
Thanks again.
#14
Posted 2012-June-11, 23:39
ulven, on 2012-June-11, 11:19, said:
"However, strangely
enough, the 2♥ and 2♠ Tartan Twos suffer an average loss of -
0.31."
"...the most damning
feature of the opening is the fact that its users dedicate the 2♥
and 2♠ openings to weak two suiters with five card in the bid
major and a minor and those openings present a heavy negative
IMP outcome."
"The data includes all the deals played in the European Championships from 1997 to 2004 and the knock-out stages of Olympics
and World Championships from 1987 to 2003, whenever there
are comparisons from all tables in play."
[Tartan Two is like Muiderberg]
Having read this article as well I must confess that I too was most surprised by this finding. The author goes on to say why he thought this was the reason: "This last data was, in my opinion, the most surprising of the lot as I would have instinctively assumed that the Tartan Twos are quite effective. Maybe such a result is due to the fact that they do reveal quite a lot about the shape of opener's hand and that may be of crucial importance in the opposition successfully declaring some borderline contracts."
#15
Posted 2012-June-12, 02:40
mgoetze, on 2012-June-11, 16:05, said:
paulg, on 2012-June-11, 12:05, said:
Two comments:
1. This doesn't tell the whole story as it is perfectly reasonable to play e.g. 2♠ as spades and a minor and 2♥ as both majors.
2. Some people play 2♥ as hearts and a minor, some as hearts and any other suit. I consider the latter significantly worse.
My methodology was to use 'Muiderberg' to mean 5M, 4+m and 'Polish' to mean that it was 5-5 with hearts and another or spades and a minor. This meant that those who were playing 2♥ as 5-5 with hearts and a minor were lumped into the Muiderberg camp, so using the two hearts numbers to differentiate between those who could be 5-4 and those who could be 5-5 was not feasible. However the two spades numbers do allow this comparison.
The other problem with the analysis is that it does not capture the style. In reality, perhaps the Muiderberg openers are never 5-4 at unfavourable, or never with 5422 distribution, etc. Very few pairs disclose this on their system card.
If someone has the time and energy to spare, I expect all the information will be available at the end of the championships to analyse.
#16
Posted 2012-June-12, 04:46
ulven, on 2012-June-11, 11:19, said:
"However, strangely
enough, the 2♥ and 2♠ Tartan Twos suffer an average loss of -
0.31."
"...the most damning
feature of the opening is the fact that its users dedicate the 2♥
and 2♠ openings to weak two suiters with five card in the bid
major and a minor and those openings present a heavy negative
IMP outcome."
"The data includes all the deals played in the European Championships from 1997 to 2004 and the knock-out stages of Olympics
and World Championships from 1987 to 2003, whenever there
are comparisons from all tables in play."
[Tartan Two is like Muiderberg]
I know the article very well, but I consider it fairly meaningless. They don't say how often these 2-suited openings were opened, and they don't compare the results with the average results achieved by those pairs. If Tanzania had played in all of those tournaments with some weird convention, you can bet that the convention would not do well regardless of how good it was. Throwing different conventions together (Polish, Muiderberg, 5-4, 5-5) also seems wrong. But the worst was really that they did not tell how often these conventions came up.
- hrothgar
#17
Posted 2012-June-12, 05:45
han, on 2012-June-12, 04:46, said:
Good point.
As a matter of curiousity I had another look at the 2011 Bermuda Bowl CCs. Out of a total of 66, 25 pairs played the "weak-only" Multi. The 2♥ / 2♠ bid in turn was used by these players as follows:
14(15) Played some form of Muiderberg / Polish 2s (whatever)
The rest were using the 2♥ / 2♠ bid as a sound weak 2 opening in the suit (9-11 HCP, some even as high as 10-13 HCP)
#18
Posted 2012-June-14, 13:19
32519, on 2012-June-11, 23:32, said:
How would your auction change with the red and black suit holdings reversed in both opener's and responder's hands? You still have a double suit fit.
Thanks again.
When I was first shown this treatment, it was pointed out that the following are vital to your bidding -- learning both
a ) Opener's minor and in some systems whether 4 or 5 cards ; and
b ) Opener's distribution ( shortness, if any ).
When ♥ are the Muiderberg Major, you have to be a bit more creative.
You would lose a vital step if 2NT! were the "ask for minor" .
So, I suggest : 2H! - 2S! = the "ask" .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Here is what I come up for the ♠ case and ♦ is the minor:
2S! - 2NT! ( asks for minor )
3D - ??
...... 3H! = GF, agrees Diam
...... 3S = GF, sets ♠ as trump, asks distribution
........ etc, etc
...... 4C! = double-fit ( ♠ & ♦ ); asks distribution:
................. - ??
....................... 4D! = 5 2 4 2
....................... 4H! = ♥--shortness
....................... 4S! = ♣--shortness
Note: I still used the 4C! ( instead of 4D ) bid for the double-fit of ♠ & ♦ ... in order to leave room for three distribution bids at or below 4S . [ Edit: or switch the meanings of 4D! and 4S! where 4D! = ♣-shortness and 4S! = NO shortness ( 5 2 4 2 ) consistent with the previous case where ♣ is the minor ] .
TWOferBRIDGE
"imo by far in bridge the least understood concept is how to bid over a jump-shift
( 1M-1NT!-3m-?? )." ....Justin Lall
" Did someone mention relays? " .... Zelandakh
K-Rex to Mikeh : " Sometimes you drive me nuts " .
#19
Posted 2012-June-16, 00:08
1. Two-Suited hands (below opening strength)
2. Normal 1-of-a-suit
3. Pass
4. Multi
Group A
Group B
#20
Posted 2013-July-11, 22:50