Dit is een oude revisie van het document!
Minorwood
- If we are already in a game-forcing auction,
- And, we have not agreed another suit,
- And, the minor has already been bid naturally twice,
- Then, the third bid of the minor (at the 4-level) is Minorwood.
The second case is Jump Minorwood, and it works like this:
If we are in a constructive auction (as in at least invitational to game),
And, we have not agreed another suit,
And, I have yet to limit my hand,
Then, a jump to 4 of a minor is Minorwood, if one of these conditions applies:
Either, your last bid suit was the minor
Or, my first bid was a minor.
This may sound complicated, but the rules are really just plain common-sense, as hopefully will become apparent with these examples. We’ll start with some auctions which are not Minorwood:
(A) 1♦ 4♦ (B) 1♣ 1♦ (C) 1♣ 1♠ (D) 1♣ 1♠
2♦ 4♦ 4♣ 2♠ 4♣
(A) This is not Minorwood because 1♦ did not create an invitational auction … so, without other prior agreements, 4♦ is simply preemptive … lots of Diamonds and out.
(B) Same story … 2♦ does not elevate the auction to “invitational to game” status, so 4♦ is not Minorwood … we don’t suppose that we’ll ever use this bid in our lifetime, so we won’t even waste your time offering a meaning. And, if after 2♦ you really do have an RKCB type of hand? No problem … bid 2 of a major, just to keep things moving along, and then bid 4♦.
(C) Again, 1♠ did not invite us to game, so 4♣ is not Minorwood. Then, what is it? We suggest that it is a Spade raise … with solid Clubs.
(D) This is not Minorwood because we have agreed Spades. It’s a Splinter.
Bothwood
Yes, as the name suggests, we actually advocate both Minorwood and Redwood. This is what we suggest:
- First option is to follow the Minorwood rules whenever they apply
- If Minorwood is operational, then the would-be Redwood bid is either a cue-bid or (if a jump) a
Splinter
- If Minorwood is not operational on a particular sequence, then revert to Redwood
- If that doesn’t work (presumably because no fit and/or force have been established), then a jump to
4NT will usually be interpreted as RKCB.
- Finally, if you had a Minorwood or Redwood bid at your disposal, then bidding 4NT is natural (and,
usually, invitational to slam)
