The Montreal Relay. As published in The Bridge World August, 1974, Volume 45, No. 11. Contributed by: Lynn Wardell

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The Montreal Relay As published in The Bridge World August, 1974, Volume 45, No. 11 Contributed by: Lynn Wardell Photograph of Mr. Eric Kokish in the year 2006

The Montreal Relay by Eric Kokish, Montreal Several years ago, a bridge idea was born in Canada s greatest city. With due apologies to offended countrymen, I ll call it the Montreal Relay because that s where it comes from, and that s what it does. The Montreal Relay is a simple concept, which can be applied to most natural systems and some artificial ones. It is designed to make the flow of constructive bidding smoother and at the same time solve some of the problems that develop when competition forces the opening bidder to make a decision at an uncomfortable level. The Montreal Relay is a response of one diamond to partner s one-club opening bid, certainly not too difficult to remember. To get full value from the relay, the partnership should have certain basic agreements that fall under the heading of style. First, the partnership should tend to open one diamond with four diamonds and four or five clubs. Second, the partnership should raise freely with three-card support for a major-suit response to an opening bid. Third, the partnership should be prepared to play negative doubles extensively. Most important of all, the partnership should agree that trump support should be offered as soon as the auction permits - that is, hands with the strength for one response should tend to raise if possible. It is assumed that an opening bid of one club is natural (three or more) and nonforcing. When the responder chooses to keep the opening bid alive, he should respond in a major suit only if he welcomes a raise with three-card support. this implies a five-card or longer suit, but a chunky four-bagger should often be introduced (this leaves the responder room for judgment). Without a suitable major suit to mention, responder has the option of responding one notrump (a good 8 to 11 HCP), which denies a four-card major; or two notrump (forcing, 12-14, or 17-19 if followed by four notrump), which does not deny a fourcard major since opener may check back with three clubs for a major fit; three notrump (15-16, 4-3-3-3 distribution); or the Montreal Relay one diamond, which is really a waiting type of response, carrying only the message that responder has enough to respond and probably does not have a five-card major (unless he also has six diamonds and a very good hand). What is the point behind all this? The most obvious advantage is being able to raise safely in competitive situations when the response has been in a major suit.

There is a very fine line between courage and folly. It is well and good to say we raise with three trumps and take our chances, but a series of hands where one must take nine tricks with x-x-x-x opposite K-x-x in the trump suit can be a chastening experience. The best 4-3 fits are characterized by good trumps, and the rest are best avoided if possible. When a Relay player chooses to respond in a major with K-Q-10-x, he has some reason to welcome a raise; and he has this option as part of the system. He is not a robot who must bid his suits up the line regardless of quality. I am aware that many players would respond one diamond to one club with Jxxx - Jxxx - xxx - Ax (or even with the minors reversed), hoping for a major response. Their partners, however, will not hesitate to raise diamonds competitively if necessary. Accordingly there is a risk involved, and no good player takes more risks than he has to. Another immediately visible benefit occurs in uncontested auctions. Say you open one club with Axx - AQx - x - AQxxxx Partner responds one heart. There really is no good bid. Three clubs overstates the suit and understates the support; two clubs is not a bid; two hearts is a gross underbid; two hearts is a gross underbid; three hearts may catch partner with x-xx-x in hearts; two spades is far too much. With partner known to have five hearts, or K-J-10-x at worst, the only problem now is three hearts or a more aggressive action. And this type of hand happens more often than you would care to believe. An advantage not so readily apparent occurs when a standard bidder responds one heart on a bad suit and a weakish hand; then partner, with some hand like Axxx - Kxxx - x - AQxx bids three hearts (admittedly at the bottom of his range) and you struggle to get out for down one. Relay players bid one diamond, and when opener rebids one heart may raise to two hearts without getting too high. Certain inferences become available to Relay players: The auction one club-one diamond-one heart-two clubs is not a strained preference. With only one bid to make, responder would raise to two clubs immediately. Since he might, however, have been interested in trying for a spade fit, he could respond one diamond with the intention

of bidding one spade over one heart. When he doesn t bid spades, it is apparent that he was worth more than one forward move. Therefore, this sequence shows extra values, about 10-11 points. This leaves on club-one diamond-one heartthree clubs forcing, eliminating a potentially dangerous use of fourth suit forcing (i.e., playing a generally limit-oriented style, one might have to rebid one spade over one heart, preparatory to raising clubs, in order to force, since one club-one diamond-one heart-three clubs would not be forcing but simply encouraging). It is best to be able to eliminate awkward auctions whenever possible, and it is through the vehicle of the relay that we can eliminate this particular one. In order to reduce the occasions when a diamond partial is missed, opener should not suppress his diamonds; he should frequently open one diamond with 4-5 in the minor in order to have a rebid over a major-suit response. It is important to remember that since the diamond response may be made on such a hand as AQx - x - AQx - AQJxxx opener cannot raise this response merely because he has four-card support.if he does choose to open one club on 4-5 hands, he must be able to rebid two clubs or one notrump over a potential one-diamond response. With 4-6, he must rebid his clubs.it is in these situations that the artificial diamond response creates distortions, but these distortions always leave a fluid, undisturbed auction and present us with certain new opportunities. In our style, a jump rebid in a minor shows a very good suit with about a king more than a minimum, nonforcing. Standard systems will tolerate slightly more in the way of high cards. What do standard bidders rebid with this type of hand over a one-diamond re-sponse? AQx - x - AQx - AQJxxx Three clubs is an underbid, two spades extremely dangerous, three diamonds no better. Relay players can bid only two diamonds, the same bid that one would make over one heart (disregarding the risky three-notrump rebid with the potential heart rebid to follow). This innocent, space-saving bid is a reverse although it may not sound like one. If one forces a partner who may have a few diamonds to the three-level to take a preference to clubs, one must have a good hand. Partner can now bid a major-suit stopper,show real diamonds by bidding them, take a forcing preference to three clubs, bids two notrump to show weakness and force a three-club rebid from opener, or jump to three notrump to show about 11-12 HCP with secondary cards and no good fit. This type of situation, with its accompanying treatments, can be very useful rather than very

difficult. The reverse to two diamonds, remember, always shows at least five clubs; and as such can be used to show all good club hands, with or without secondary diamonds. The reason the partnership must use negative doubles so extensively is that good opponents will compete over the relay, hoping to shut out the forthcoming major fit. Our own style is to use a double by opener for penalties when fourth hand interferes, and a double by responder for takeout. This extends to cases where overcaller s partner raises. Since responder may have to bid at the threelevel at his second turn against aggressive opponents, he should be prepared to respond on reasonable four-card major suits when there sis some danger of being unable to compete later. Again, the system is designed to encourage good judgment, not suppress. it. In my bridge odyssey I have only encountered one other pair outside the Montreal area who play anything like this. They were from the deep South. It s surprising to me that something so simple and yet so sound has been disregarded by so many great theoreticians.* The Montreal Relay is used only in this one situation and replaces one natural bid only, while throwing open a world full of new possibilities. You ll be amazed at the indirect advantages that seem to fit in with this type of approach, and you may even discover your own version, like the Winnipeg Waiting-Bid, or the Pottstown Pause... or... -------- * Actually, the idea has been around for a long time. One of its earliest exponents in America was George Kennedy, whose one-diamond response merely denied a five-card major. -- Ed.