Overall Design
From Simplex
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** For example, after a 1{{Hs}} opening by partner, a hand containing 6 HCP and four cards in the heart suit would immediately raise to 3{{Hs}}. (Partner is known to have at least five hearts. Add those five to the four that responder has makes nine. Take six from nine means a raise to the 3-level.) | ** For example, after a 1{{Hs}} opening by partner, a hand containing 6 HCP and four cards in the heart suit would immediately raise to 3{{Hs}}. (Partner is known to have at least five hearts. Add those five to the four that responder has makes nine. Take six from nine means a raise to the 3-level.) | ||
* <big> ''PRINCIPLE 11'': '''If a bidder cannot make the first-round bid his hand merits (because the opposition have already taken the auction too high), the bidder simply doubles, with an implied message to partner: "RHO has just taken my opening bid away, and I believe it is safe for you to bid at this or one level higher." </big> | * <big> ''PRINCIPLE 11'': '''If a bidder cannot make the first-round bid his hand merits (because the opposition have already taken the auction too high), the bidder simply doubles, with an implied message to partner: "RHO has just taken my opening bid away, and I believe it is safe for you to bid at this or one level higher." </big> | ||
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* <big> ''PRINCIPLE 24'': ''' Apart from the use of double, Simplex never keys its bids off the opponents' bidding. ''' (There is, for example, no concept of a jump overcall relative to an opponent's bid. And a bid of the 'enemy suit' is always natural, showing at least three cards in that suit.) </big> | * <big> ''PRINCIPLE 24'': ''' Apart from the use of double, Simplex never keys its bids off the opponents' bidding. ''' (There is, for example, no concept of a jump overcall relative to an opponent's bid. And a bid of the 'enemy suit' is always natural, showing at least three cards in that suit.) </big> | ||
** <big> The philosophy of Simplex is that each hand is worth a particular bid, or sequence of bids, and if one of those bids cannot be made because of opposition bidding, the appropriate bid is usually to double. </big> | ** <big> The philosophy of Simplex is that each hand is worth a particular bid, or sequence of bids, and if one of those bids cannot be made because of opposition bidding, the appropriate bid is usually to double. </big> |
Revision as of 09:59, 2 November 2012
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