The Arctic Club: Download From The Site
The Arctic Club: Download From The Site
The Arctic Club: Download From The Site
http://www.chapman-lab.uaf.edu/~ftgrb/bridge/arctic.htm
on 25 January 2001.
Arctic Club / P.2
General Philosophy
For the most part, I like Standard American just fine. (Especially if I can tack a few dozen
extra conventions onto it.) So why did I invent a new bidding system? I wanted more
aggressive openings than Standard allows. I didn't want to have to open 1D on a 3-card
suit. I didn't want to throw away a whole level of bidding by opening 2C on all my big
hands.
On the other hand, Precision's 1C opening falls to pieces if the opponents interfere
vigorously (and I love to interfere vigorously when my opponents play Precision!), and
Precision's 13-15 1NT makes it awkward to bid balanced 12-point hands. Also, my own
experience is that the Precision 2C (5+ clubs, 11-15) misfires as often as not, though
others have disagreed with this claim.
In addition to avoiding these pitfalls, I wanted my system to be as natural as possible.
(And, of course, it has to be legal under the ACBL's General Convention Chart.) A rather
tall order -- I have not found a perfect solution yet, but the Arctic Club as described below
has given me good results. I spent many hours analyzing hand records from regionals and
found that in a typical session, Arctic yields better results than SA on 2-5 hands and worse
results on 0-3 hands.
The system is named "Arctic" because I developed it in Alaska (though Fairbanks actually
has only a subarctic climate) and first played it here in Fairbanks. Its first use in a large
game was at the Great Salt Lake Regional, Salt Lake City, UT, 17 May 1996.
I love theoretical discussions of bidding, as well as practical bidding problems. Feel free to
write me.
You can download a copy of the convention card I use when I play Arctic in ACBL events.
(32K ZIPped version of .BMP file)
Arctic Club / P.3
Opening Bids
Click on any opening bid to see responses to the opening. Or, click on any of the following
links: Responses; Second-round sequences following an opening bid of 1C, 1D, 1H, 1S,
1NT, 2C, 2D, 2H, 2S, 2NT, 3C, 3D, 3H, 3S 3NT, 4C and higher; Roman Blackwood and
Gerber; Special methods of overcalling and coping with interference; Suggested defense
to the Arctic Club system
1C: Forcing. Any one of the following ---
Balanced hand, 11-13, 17-20, 24+ points.
5+ clubs, 13-18 points, no other 5-card suit (or 4-4-1-4 distribution).
Unbalanced hand, 19+ points, any distribution.
Opening with a balanced 11 points, or with 11-12 points and a 5-card club suit, is
optional.
2C: 6 clubs (QTxxxx or better), no void, 7-13 HCP. May have a 4-card major.
2D: 6 diamonds (QTxxxx or better), no void, 7-13 HCP. May have a 4-card major.
2H or 2S: 6-card suit (QTxxxx), no void, 4-10 HCP, no side 4-card major.
Arctic Club / P.4
3NT: Solid suit in either major (AKQxxxx, AKJxxxxx, or better); at most one king and one
queen (no aces) on the side.
1D: Usually a negative response (up to 7 points). Rarely, a hand containing 11+ points and
no long suit except diamonds.
1H: 8+ points, 4+ hearts.
1S: 8+ points, 4+ spades.
1NT: 8-10 (or bad 11) points; usually a balanced hand.
2C: Any of the following ---
Balanced 11-13 points (may be as few as 3 clubs if 3-3-4-3)
11+ points, 4+ clubs, no 4-card major
14+ points, 5+ clubs, with a 4-card major
2D, 2H, or 2S: 6-card suit, 3-7 points, no side 4-card major.
2NT: Balanced hand, 14-15 or 18+ points.
3C: 6-card suit, 3-7 points, no 4-card major.
3D, 3H, or 3S: 14+ points, singleton or void in bid suit, willingness to play in any other
denomination. Usually 4-4-4-1 or 5-4-4-0.
3NT: Balanced 16-17 points.
4C, 4H, or 4S: Weak hand, long suit; to play.
4D: Asking for aces.
Responses to 1D
3C: 3-7 points, 6-card suit, no side 4-card major, no diamonds support.
3D: <10 points, 4+ diamonds, no good 4-card major.
3H or 3S: 14+ points, diamond support, singleton in bid suit.
3NT: Balanced 16-17 points.
4C: Asking for aces.
4D: 5+ diamonds, very weak hand.
4H and 4S: weak hand, long suit; to play.
Responses to 1H or 1S
Responses to 1NT
Arctic Club / P.7
Responses to 2C
Responses to 2D
Arctic Club / P.8
Responses to 2H and 2S
Responses to 2NT
Standard continuations apply. The one exception is 3S: this bid shows slam interest
and one or both minors.
Arctic Club / P.9
Responses to 3 of a suit
Standard continuations apply. As always in Arctic, to ask for aces, bid 4 of the other
minor over 3C and 3D, 4NT over 3H and 3S.
Responses to 3NT
Pass: Rarely, responder may judge that the hand should play in notrump.
4C: Asks opener to show an outside king.
4D: Asks opener to bid his suit.
4H and 4S: To play.
4NT: Asks opener to show an outside queen.
Higher suit bids: control asking bids.
Second-round continuations after the Kantar 3NT
Responses to 4C or 4D
Responses to 4H or 4S
Responses to 4NT
5C: no ace
5D: DA only
5H: HA only
5S: SA only
5NT: any two aces
6C: CA only
Rebids
Sequences after 1C is opened
Note that, in contrast to Precision, almost all of the second-round bids are natural.
Responder bids 1D:
With less than 19 points, opener makes a minimum rebid:
1H: 4+ clubs, 4 hearts, usually 14-18 points (occasionally less).
1S: same thing, with 4 spades.
1NT: To play: a balanced hand and 11-13, 17, or a bad 18 points.
2C: Club one-suiter (rarely with four diamonds), usually 14-18 points
(occasionally less).
None of these minimum rebids is forcing. Responder tries to get out as cheaply as
he can, by passing, taking a preference, or bidding his own suit (with 5-7 points).
Responder can raise 1H or 1S with 4-card support and 5-7 points. If responder has
a strong hand with diamonds, he can take any strong-sounding action.
After 1C-1D-1NT, 2C is Delayed Stayman (promising 5-7 points and a 4-card
major), 2D and 2H are weak transfers, and any higher rebid by responder shows
the rare strong diamond hand. In replying to the Stayman inquiry, a minimum
opener bids 2D, 2H, 2S as usual; a 17-18 point opener bids 2NT, 3H, or 3S.
Opener's rebids from 2D to 3D show strong hands:
2D: Artificial and forcing to game.
2H: 19-23 points, 5+ hearts unless 4-4-4-1 with a singleton club, diamond, or
spade.
2S: 19-23 points, 5+ spades unless 4-4-4-1 with a singleton heart
2NT: Balanced hand, 19-20 points (possibly a good 18).
3C: 19-23 points, 5+ clubs.
3D: 19-23 points, 5+ diamonds.
Responder may pass 2H, 2S, 3C, or 3D with a very bad hand and a tolerance for
opener's suit. The cheaper minor (or 3H over 3D) is a second negative; new suits
and notrump are natural, 5-7; jump shifts are splinters. Raise to game is weak;
single raise is more encouraging.
After 1C-1D-2D, responder may not pass. 3C is a second negative; other bids are
natural.
Arctic Club / P.12
unbid major shows 4 cards in the major, 5 clubs, and 14+ points; 3NT is to play; 4D
asks for aces; other bids are slam tries.
Responder makes a strong jump response:
A response of 2NT invites opener to raise notrump naturally; show a long club suit
or a side 4-card suit by bidding at the 3-level; ask for aces with 4D; bid any game or
slam, to play. (If responder has 18+ instead of 14-15, he may raise opener's
signoff.)
Responses of 3D, 3H, and 3S to 1C are splinter bids, suggesting the ability to play
game in any suit except the one bid. Opener may bid 3NT, any suit game, or any
slam to play; 4D to ask for aces; 4NT to invite 6NT with a maximum.
A response of 3NT describes responder's hand so well that opener either bids 4D to
ask for aces or places the final contract.
Responder makes a weak jump response:
Opener usually passes. A 2NT rebid, if available, is "Ogust"; simple suit bids show
19+ hands; all jump bids (and a single raise of responder's suit) are to play.
Most second-round and later bids are essentially standard. Opener's hand is
categorized as weak (11-13 points), medium (14-16 points), or strong (17-18
points.)
Responder makes a 1-over-1 bid:
1NT: 11-13 points, balanced or semi-balanced. 2C by responder is New
Minor Forcing (1 round). Responder's reverses are forcing one round, jump
shifts to game.
2 of a new suit (non-reverse): 11-16 points, 4+ cards. Responder's jumps
are forcing to game; the fourth suit forces one round.
Reverse: 14-19 points, 4+ cards. Responder must bid. 2 of responder's suit
and 2NT are responder's weak bids. Other bids by responder force to game.
We play Lebensohl after a reverse.
Opener raises responder -- To the 2-level with 11-13; the 3-level with 14-16;
to the 4-level with 17-19. The same game and slam tries are available after
1D-1H-2H as after 1H-2H.
Opener rebids his suit(nonforcing) -- At the 2-level with 11-13 (usually 6
trump and no side suit); at the 3-level with 14-16 and a good 6-card suit; at
the 4-level with an "8-trick preempt" too good to open at the 4-level.
Responder rebids as in Standard.
Arctic Club / P.14
Almost all of our Stayman and Jacoby sequences have the usual meaning. Bill
Root's Modern Bridge Conventions gives a good summary. 1NT-2D-2H-4C is a
splinter, not Gerber. We rarely, if ever, "super-accept" after a transfer. The Total
Tricks-based jump is nice with weak hands, but too often, it wastes bidding room
needed for constructive auctions.
The 2S response is a transfer to 3C, but responder may have a weak hand with
either minor or a strong hand with both minors. My conventions page describes
responder's rebids.
If responder bids 2NT and opener has a maximum, he may bid 3H or 3S (with a 5-
card major) or 3NT.
If responder bids 3C or 3D, opener usually either bids 3NT or passes. A major-suit
rebid asks responder to bid 3NT with the other major stopped, 4 of the minor
without.
The 3H and 3S responses haven't come up enough for me to know what the most
effective set of rebids is.
Ogust: A 2NT responses asks the opener to describe his strength, as follows:
3C: Minimum hand, weak suit (only 1 top honor)
3D: Maximum hand, weak suit.
3H: Minimum hand, good suit (2 of the top 3 honors)
3S: Maximum hand, good suit.
3NT: All three top honors.
Second-round bidding after 2NT, 3C, 3D, 3H, and 3S proceeds as in Standard
American.
A 4C response asks opener to show a side king, if any. Opener bids 4 of any suit in
which he holds a king (4 of the trump suit with no side king.)
A 4D response tells opener to sign off in either 4H or 4S.
A 4NT response asks opener to show a side queen. This bid may be used on the
second round, following a 4C inquiry.
After any of these bids, responder sets the final contract.
Gerber applies in the following situations: 4D in any auction where clubs are the
only suit named or clubs have been agreed as trump; 4C in any auctions where
diamonds are the only suit named or have been agreed as trump; 4C in any auction
involving Stayman; 4 of the lower unbid minor (4C if both minors have been bid)
over any natural notrump bid. Otherwise, Blackwood applies (except after Jacoby
Transfers, when one cannot ask for aces unless someone makes another natural
notrump bid.)
After Gerber, 4NT is to play. 5 of the "asking suit" asks for kings. 4 of a new suit
after the first or second step asks for clarification. For example, after 1NT-4C-4D-
4H, 4NT by opener shows no aces, a suit bid shows the other three aces. after
1NT-4C-4H-4S, 4NT shows all four aces, a suit bid shows the ace of the bid suit
only. (The same asking bid can be used at the 5-level after kings are shown.)
After Blackwood, 5NT asks for kings; 5 of an the cheapest unbid suit orders partner
to bid 5NT; the next unbid suit above this is the Grand Slam Force.
I've been experimenting with some refinements (e.g., 6S over 5NT showing any two
kings and a previously undisclosed singleton, instead of two non-touching kings) but
I'm unconvinced that they are worth the extra trouble to memorize them.
Arctic Club / P.19
Overcalling
Arctic uses standard (conservative?) overcalls after suit bids: 8-16 points and 5+
card suits, weak jump overcalls except over preemptive openings, 1NT=15-17
(systems on, including Lebensohl), Michaels, Unusual NT. Invisible cue-bids are
used, e.g., (1NT) Pass (2D-Jacoby) 2H is Michaels because opponent has shown
hearts.
Over opposing 1NT and strong club openings, Arctic uses the Sierra convention,
another invention/adaptation of mine.
Arctic Club / P.20