- Kaplan-Sheinwold
The Kaplan-Sheinwold (or "K-S")
bidding system was developed and popularized byEdgar Kaplan andAlfred Sheinwold during their partnership, which flourished during the 1950s and 1960s. K-S is one of many natural systems. The system was definitively described in their 1957 book "How to Play Winning Bridge ", later reissued inpaperback and still later revised.Kaplan-Sheinwold and the
Roth-Stone system were the two most influential challengers toStandard American bidding in the USA in the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s. Although K-S is not frequently played in its original form in the 21st century, many of its features (though not the 12-14 point 1NT opening) survive in the popular2/1 Game Forcing system. Additionally, a few elements of Kaplan-Sheinwold (notably Five-Card Majors) have become accepted as part ofStandard American practice.Among modern experts,
Chip Martel andLew Stansby play a system closely modeled on K-S, with loads of gadgets. In the late 1960s, thePrecision Club system grafted a strong, forcing opening of 1Clubs onto K-S, in effect following earlier suggestions byMarshall Miles that five-card majors and the weak no trump be added to theSchenken system . Kaplan viewed Precision with distaste, noting the disadvantages, both theoretical and at-the-table, of combining a strong club with five-card majors.The principal features of K-S, as revised in the 1960s, are these:
# Weak no trump. An opening bid of 1NT promises 12–14
high card points (HCP). Transfers are not used, and Stayman is non-forcing. Kaplan's highly successful partnership with Norman Kay used "Timid K-S," which departed from the original K-S structure by using a strong no trump when vulnerable.
# Five-card majors, with limit raises. A 1NT response is forcing and responder's double is negative. 3NT is the strong, forcing raise. Two of a minor over a major suit opening is game forcing, unless rebid. 2Hearts over 1Spades can be weaker (minimum is 10 points and a five card suit) than two of a minor, so as not to miss a good heart partial. Kaplan preferred to open 1Spades with 5-5 in the black suits and a minimum hand.
# Minor suit openings are strong or unbalanced, or both, because the weak no trump handles all weak, balanced hands. A 1NT rebid by opener shows a strong no trump (15–17 HCP) and a 2NT rebid shows 18–20 HCP. Opener's reverses are forcing. Opener's simple rebids (e.g., 1 m – 1M; 2m) are restricted to absolute minimum hands, and tend to show six cards in the minor. Opener's jump rebids (e.g., 1 m – 1M; 3m) are enormously strong, promising a hand just shy of a forcing opening bid. After a 1Diams opening, a rebid of 2Clubs shows the strength and pattern of a reverse, and opener's jump to 3Clubs shows a weak hand with 5-5 in the minors.
# In response to one of a minor, responder shows a four card major if possible. The only exception (i.e. responding first in a minor suit and then bidding a major on the second round) occurs when the minor suit is strictly longer than the major and the hand is of game-forcing strength. Thus 1 Clubs - 1 Diams; 1Hearts - 1Spades, for instance, shows a game-forcing hand with at least 5 diamonds and 4 spades.
# Inverted minor suit raises are used (a single raise is strong, a double raise is weak and preemptive).
#Weak two bid s, including 2Diams.
# 2Clubs is the only strong, forcing opening.
# Defensively, simpleovercall s are taken to have the same range as an opening bid, and take-out doubles emphasize distribution.References
* Kaplan's description of K-S in the
Official Encyclopedia of Bridge
* The Kaplan-Sheinwold System of Winning Bridge (Signet, 1963)
* and various articles inThe Bridge World appearing between 1963 and 1997.
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