Strong two clubs
s that incorporate a strong 2 clubs opening bid include modern Standard American, standard Acol, 2/1 game forcing and many others.
In most natural bridge bidding systems, the opening bid of 2 is used exclusively for hands too strong for an opening bid at the one-level. Typically, the bid is reserved for hands that are almost strong enough to bid to the game level on their own power, or even stronger. The exact requirements for the bid vary considerably depending upon the system used and partnership agreement.
In most early bidding systems, opening bids of two of a suit signified a very strong hand and were referred to as strong two bids. However, pioneer bridge inventors like Pierre Albarran and David Burnstine saw that the frequency of such bids is fairly low, and that a 2 bid can be used for all strong hands, leaving other two-level opening bids for other purposes.
Bid requirements
The strength requirements for the 2 bid differ slightly in different systems. In all cases they show a hand which is close to game forcing. For balanced hands, a 2 bid shows 22 or more points in Standard American, and 23 or more points in standard Acol. For unbalanced hands, the typical strength is about 9 or more playing tricks, or 3 losers or less if using Losing-Trick Count.Responses
Natural responses
With "natural" responses, which is the most commonly used treatment, the 2 bid is artificial and very weak. All other bids are natural and positive.SAYC responses
SEQUENCES AFTER A STRONG 2C OPENINGA 2C opening shows 22+ points, or the playing equivalent.
Responses.
2D
2H, 2S, 3C, 3D
2NT
A balanced hand is not required for this bid with matchpoint scoring.
Waiting and positive 2
Some players alter or reverse the order of natural responses in order to preserve bidding space and allow for more accuracy in later bidding. There are several treatments in circulation:- Waiting 2 – a response of 2 is a relay asking the opening bidder to further describe the strong hand. This bid does not limit the responder's hand in any way. Some players combine this response with each of the following.
- * Natural 2 and 2, typically showing at least a game-going hand with at least a five-card major. Some players go as far to require a 6-card suit with 2 top honors for a suit response.
- * Weak 2. The response of 2 shows a very bad hand, making the 2 relay a game-forcing bid.
- Positive 2 – a response of 2 shows values, and all other bids show less than 7 HCP.
- Positive 2 – a response of 2 show a positive, and 2 a negative
"Three Point Step" responses
- 2 = 0-3 High Card Points ; Very Weak. The responder normally will bid again only to show a long suit or a trump fit, but should use "Garbage Stayman" or "Garbage Transfers" if appropriate whenever opener's rebid is 2NT. The opening bidder obviously needs more than minimum values or a good trump fit to go to game.
- 2 = 4-6 HCP; Alertable and Game Forcing. Subsequent bids are natural, seeking a trump fit, typically with "systems on" if opener rebids 2NT showing a balanced hand.
- 2 = 7-9 HCP; Alertable and Slam Inviting. Subsequent bids are natural, seeking a trump fit, typically with "systems on" if opener rebids 2NT showing a balanced hand. Opener must have extra values or a good trump fit to go to slam.
- 2NT = 10 or more HCP; Alertable and Slam Forcing. Subsequent bids are natural, seeking a trump fit, typically with "systems on" if opener rebids 3NT showing a balanced hand.
- Over interference, a Double by responder shows a stolen bid and a Pass shows any inferior response. This treatment results in loss of granularity only if the interfering bid is 2 or higher.
- "My partner's response of 2 shows 4-6 HCP. It says nothing whatsoever about distribution, and in particular neither shows nor denies hearts."
- "My partner's double of 2 shows 7-9 HCP. It says nothing whatsoever about distribution, and in particular neither shows nor denies spades."
The origin of this convention is uncertain. Some players have attributed it to Oswald Jacoby, of Jacoby Transfer and Jacoby 2NT fame, while others refer to it as "Castlebury", but the present author is not aware of any source that would verify either attribution.
Control-showing responses
Some players prefer to show their controls rather than suits in the response to 2 opening bid. This has an advantage in cases when the opener has a strong one- or two-suiter, but can take up bidding space and miss a suit fit when the opener is balanced or semi-balanced.- In standard "controls," an ace counts as two controls and a king counts as one control. The theoretical advantage of this system is that aces and kings may be more significant for finding a potential slam than other honor cards, but it also may miss a slam opportunity if the responder has a lot of inferior honor cards. There are several variations in the manner of showing the number of controls, all of which are alertable. The following examples of responses are representative but by no means all-inclusive.
- * 2 shows 0 or 1 control,
- * 2 shows 2 controls,
- * 2 shows 3 controls,
- * 2NT shows 3 controls, and
- * 3 shows 4 controls,
- * 3 or higher, etc. on up the line.
- With ace-showing responses, the responder bids the suit of the Ace, 2NT with two or more kings, and 2 with a king or less. With 2 aces, the responder bids 3. As a corollary, subsequent Blackwood by the opener asks for kings rather than aces.
Either-or treatment
Advantages
One major advantage of the artificial opening bid of 2 for all types of strong hands is that other opening bids at the two-level become available for weak two bids, thus eliminating many possible bids for the opponents. These weak two hands appear 20 times as often as the very strong hands, which illustrates the inefficiency of reserving all opening bids at the two-level for very strong hands.An alternative is to use strong two bids for hands which are strong but not game forcing, which reduces the range of one-level openings and helps bidding accuracy. However, since weak twos are so useful, there are methods which allow weak twos in hearts and spades and use 2 to show a different range of strong hands; these are Benjaminised Acol, Reverse Benji and the Multicoloured Two Diamonds.
Another advantage is the relative precision with which strong balanced hands can be bid. An opening bid of 2 NT indicates a balanced hand with 20-21 HCP in Standard American or 20-22 HCP in standard Acol, and for even stronger balanced hands, the opening bid of 2 can be used. The opener's rebid then indicates the strength of the hand using steps of 2-3 HCP. Hence 2 - 2 - 2NT shows 22-24 HCP's in Standard American or 23-24 HCP in Acol, while a 3NT rebid can show 25+ HCP's.
Disadvantages
If the opening bid of 2 is exclusively used for strong hands, the auction becomes more susceptive to disruptive overcalls than the "old" treatment of strong two bids. However, that danger is smaller when compared to strong 1 system in strong club systems, because 2 bid is made with bigger high-card strength and on a higher level. On the other hand, the strong 2 opening reduces the bidding space for the pair themselves compared with strong 1—sometimes, the pair can be unable to find a fit on a relatively low level, and/or reduce the space for effective slam investigation with cue bidding.Other treatments
In most strong club systems, the opening bid of 2 is natural and promises a hand with long clubs. As such, it makes overcalls more difficult, since they have to be made at the two-level. Chances are therefore increased that the side of the opener has an undisturbed auction, and the opponents will not discover a fit in a major suit. However, as a corollary, their strong 1 opening bid is more susceptible to preempting by opponents.Another variant advocates two strong forcing openings, 2 for strong hands with fewer than four spades and 2 for strong hands with four or more spades.