Playing in a minor: part-score contracts

by Michel Bessis, Philippe Cronier & Jean-Christophe Quantin

In this new three-part series, we will look at when and how we prefer to play in a minor suit rather than in no-trump. We will first study part-scores, then games, and finally slams.

What types of hands should encourage us to choose a minor suit as trumps? What mechanisms make it possible to do so?

Summary

Direct raises in the minors
And after a natural overcall?

After a 1NT opening: Minor suit transfers
The false Check-back
Exercises
There’s more to Bridge than bidding

Direct raises in the minors

a) The simple raise

A raise of the opening minor to the two-level guarantees five cards (sometimes only four, especially in diamonds) and denies a four-card major, which should be shown first. It indicates a hand in the 6–10 HCP range, including distribution.

Be careful: do not automatically raise to 2 just because you hold five-card support. Carefully examine the shape of your hand and the concentration or dispersion of your honors.

Principle: with a balanced hand and distributed honors, you should prefer answering 1NT.

You have 0 points in the majors and a decent Club suit, headed by a King. Go for the direct raise.

This time, you have small honors, scattered over all suits including the majors where Jack-third and Queen-doubleton constitute potential stoppers. You should prefer No-trump.

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