Tuesday, March 28, 2006 2:57 AM
Hand Evaluation – NT ( The Transfer Concept )
PITBULLS:
You build your system around hand evaluation concepts.
One common but little understood hand evaluation concept is the transfer. The transfer bid is not just for
the strong NT to right side the contract. Transfers preserve bidding room when dealing with two suiters after a 1NT opening . In competition , you can keep the bidding low with transfers
after a 1NT opener. The super accept is a concept all into itself associated
with transfers.
We like Rubensohl because I do not like RHO
jamming us out of the auction after we open 1NT. This advantage has been mentioned in previous
articles as the main reason we
switched away from Lebensohl
to that transfer treatment. However , there is much more
to transfers than meets the eyes. Transfers are in effect relays. Relays preserve bidding room as partner is put in a
straight jacket so must “puppet” as ordered. Take this hand as an example. ♠x ♥AJ10x ♦AKxxxx ♣xx , partner opens
1NT with the opponents overcalling 2♠. Playing normal Lebensohl , you bid 3♦ forcing &
partner bids 3NT. You make one more try by bidding 4♥ so partner bids
5♦ & all pass. Partners hand ♠KQJx ♥KQx ♦QJx ♣Kxx , they lead the
club queen so you are –100. Now the Rubensohl
auction. You bid 3♣ over 2♠ which is a transfer to diamonds
so you have right sided the contract. You now bid 3♥ so you describe
your 6-4 by the 3 level !! Partner now bids 3NT
ending the auction for +660.
Another advantage of the transfer is the super
accept. Same hand but this time the NT opener has ♠xxx ♥KQx ♦QJx ♣AKJx & bids 3♥ as a super accept in diamonds. Partner bids 3♠ and Blackwood gets you to your cold 6♦ . Even without a
super accept , you should get to the correct diamond contract . Do not forget
that partner may be only competing playing Rubensohl
& plans to drop you. A super accept is just that , a super hand.
Kantar has added a twist to his
version of Rubensohl ( everybody
seems to have their own ideas ) . Kantar has realized that 5-5 in the minors are
horrible to describe in competition after 1NT. Kantar reserves spades to describe both minors. If they overcall in hearts,
you always have hearts to transfer
to spades , so
the spade bid is idle. If they
overcall in spades , you do not need a spade bid as Stayman is defined as transferring to their suit . Kantar says play a spade Q bid as the minors
also. Therefore spades always
show the minors playing his
version of Rubensohl.
1NT-2♠-3♠-P ♠xxx ♥Axxx ♦KJxx ♣AK opposite ♠x ♥xx ♦AQxxx ♣QJ10xx , you arrive at 6♦ for +1370. Try getting their without a Rubensohl
toy showing the minors. Partner will probably just bid 3NT showing no stopper
and you bungle to your minor game.
Do not forget a very obvious
advantage of Rubensohl that gets overlooked with all
the other advantages. You right side
contracts from the strong NT hand. Leading up to the strong NT is
certainly better than leading thru it. 1NT-2♠-3♥-P 4♥ but with ♠Kx ♥QJx ♦Axxx ♣AQxx you have wrong sided the 4♥ game. Partner
holds ♠xx ♥AKxxx ♦Kxxx ♣Jx and 4♥ goes down one but cold from your side.
Transfers after a major opening has many of the advantages
of the transfer concept. A transfer does not specify a HCP range so it can be weak to 40
HCP . The bid allows super accepts & gives meaning to sequences
where you did not transfer. A simple major raise as opposed to a transfer into
the suit can have two different meanings. A transfer can be used as a fit showing
major raise if you support partners major later. Not enough players untap the power of the transfer concept.