Unusual vs. unusual
Unusual vs. Unusual [1] is a competitive bidding convention used in contract bridge by the opening side after a defensive bidder has made an overcall showing two suits.[2] When you or your partner has opened the bidding and an opponent has made an overcall which shows a two-suited hand (e. g., a Michaels Cue Bid[3] or an Unusual notrump Overcall[4]), one may defend against the defensive bidding with the following methods:
When the opponent’s two-suited overcall explicitly specifies two suits
- A bid in partner’s suit or a new nonadverse suit is competitive without showing game interest.
- A cuebid of the opponents’ lower ranking suit shows an invitational limit raise of partner’s suit with a likely 5-card side suit in the other nonadverse suit.
- A cuebid of the opponents’ higher ranking suit shows a game forcing raise with a likely 5-card side suit in the other nonadverse suit.
- A double shows the ability to penalize at least one of the opponent’s two specified suits. Any subsequent double by the partnership is for penalty.
When the opponent’s two-suited overcall identifies one suit and leaves the other suit unspecified
- A bid in partner’s suit or a new nonadverse suit is competitive without showing game interest.
- A cuebid of the opponents’ known suit shows a raise of partner’s suit. The raise is invitational limit raise or stronger. The cue bid raise implies a 5-card side suit (probably, not the overcaller’s unspecified second suit).
- A double shows the ability to penalize at least one of the opponent’s implied suits. Any subsequent double by the partnership is for penalty.
Additional information
Typically, raises show either four-card or longer trump support or three-card support with a splinter in a known, adverse suit. Since the overcaller with the two-suited hand probably has a short holding in the opening side's trump suit, one expects the adversely held trumps to break unevenly. Thus, the opening side should have either nine or more trumps or good ruffing values in the hand with short trumps.
The Unusual Versus Unusual (or, unusual over unusual) convention has many variants. This article presents only one variant. Thus, an agreement to play "Unusual vs. Unusual" with a new partner should include a discussion of what each partner means by "Unusual vs. Unusual" concluding in a joint agreement for the partnership.
References
- ↑ Kearse, Amalya. (1990). "Bridge Conventions Complete", Louisville, KY: Devyn Press, Inc., pp493-5
- ↑ Fuller, Grady (2006). Bridge Strategy. Aardvark Global Publishing. p. 34. ISBN 978-1-4276-1095-9.
- ↑ Michaels Cue Bid
- ↑ Unusual Notrump