THE NO-TRUMP LADDER
By Steven Gaynor
How many of you play a no-trump ladder? Ok, why do you not all have your hands up? Yes, you all play it whether you know it or not!
When you have a balanced or semi-balanced hand you have a specific and unique way to tell partner exactly how many HCP’s you have within 1 or 2 points. Let’s look at a typical ladder, most common among duplicate players.
Your hand shapes (with no particular order to the suits) are normally 4-3-3-3, 4-4-3-2, or 5-3-3-2. 6-3-3-2 is also OK in some instances. How do you show your HCP’s? Here is my ladder. You should discuss these ranges with your partners and revise them if you like.
12-14: Open you convenient minor and re-bid 1N. You just about guarantee you do not have 15 HCP when you re-bid 1N. This way partner can pass those 9 or bad 10 counts knowing game is a long shot at best.
15-17: Open 1N*. Consider doing this even with a 5-card major. How else will you get your partner to know your HCP strength? Take a hand with 2 spades and 5 hearts (2-5-3-3) and 15-16 HCP. You open 1H and partner responds 1S. Your next call is a big lie. You are too strong to bid 1N, you do not have enough hearts to re-bid them, you cannot raise spades, and you do not have a 2nd suit to show. So lie about your heart length at the start and show your partner your overall strength. It is just about always better to tell the truth about your strength when you have to tell one lie or another.
18-19: Open with your normal suit bid and jump to 2N (or raise partner’s 1N response to 2N). If you jump to 3N you should be showing a long running suit (usually the minor you opened) and are hoping to get the lead early and cash nine fast tricks. Partner’s first bid usually covers a suit in which you have shortness and no stopper. It does NOT show the 18-19 HCP hand. That is what 2N shows. You should not have two bids that can mean the same thing.
20-21: Open 2N*.
22-24: Open 2C and re-bid 2N*.
25-26: Open 3N*.The 25+ hands come up as often as the systemic bids (gambling, solid suit, etc.).
27-29: Open 2C and re-bid 3N*. This rarely comes up unless you are my opponent at Rubber Bridge.
30-37: Check the deck to make sure it is not from a pinochle game.
*To keep things simple, I recommend that you use your normal responses over any strong NT opener or overcall (Stayman/transfers, etc.) no matter what level partner bids his strong NT (1, 2, 3). If you do the same thing all the time you will not have to worry about it.
Current ACBL rules concerning 1 no-trump opening bids:
- You MUST announce the range. Please get used to this.
- Opening with a singleton is OK as long as the singleton is a Q, K or A.
- You cannot have a doubleton if you open with a singleton.
- Examples of illegal 1 NT opening shapes include:
- 6-4-2-1
- Any hand with a void or two singletons.
Our thanks to Steve for these lessons!
Part of our education is that we are ALWAYS LEARNING!