Αποτελέσματα Αναζήτησης
Read hundreds of bridge bidding conventions used in contract bridge. Blackwood, limit raises, and more exotic bids are explained in detail.
- Michaels Cuebid
In their book Modern Bridge Conventions, Bill Root and...
- Dont
The following example is from "25 More Bridge Conventions...
- Unusual 2Nt
In other conventions like DONT, however, a different...
- Jacoby Transfers
The reasoning is this: If the weak hand plays the contract,...
- Inverted Minors
In contract bridge, an intra-finesse is a rare finesse that...
- Puppet Stayman
The bidding continues naturally, with opener assuming...
- Declarer Play
All about declarer play in contract bridge with extensive...
- Bergen Raises
The Pros. The primary benefits of Bergen raises are that:...
- Michaels Cuebid
Flannery 2 is the most popular opening bid that shows a two-suited hand. It can be used if the partnership has another method of showing a strong opening bid in diamonds. It’s commonly used in conjunction with weak two-bid openings in the majors — 2 and 2 — and an artificial strong 2 opening. It replaces the weak 2 opening bid.
The convention, typically used in a game forcing auction after the Big Club opener makes a jump bid response (bypassing other possible asking bids by responder), asks responder to cuebid Aces up the line.
There are many contract bridge bidding conventions. Most players only use a few. The Bridge Burglar's guide explains the ones most commonly used.
The four new convention charts are listed in order from least to most permissive: the Basic Chart, Basic+ Chart, Open Chart, and Open+ Chart. The Basic and Basic+ Charts are intended for limited master point events.
The table below gives a summary of opening bids: The dreaded 4441 split. If you have a 4441 split and opening points you should bid the middle suit of your four-card suits if the singleton is a spade or a club. For the other two suits bid the suit below the singleton.
A bridge convention is an agreement about an artificial call or a set of related artificial calls. Calls made during the auction phase of a contract bridge game convey information about the player's card holdings.