← All articles

Playing matchpoints, neither side vulnerable, the bidding goes 1 – pass – pass to you. What is the minimum hand with any 3334 distribution that you would balance with? If the opening bid was 1, would that make much difference? Would playing IMPs make a difference?

Point No. 1: The most important variable is your balancing notrump range. You can't balance with 1NT with six HCPs if your balancing notrump range is 10-14 HCPs. Your range is a guide. You could be outside the range, but that creates problems if your partnership uses the known range to decide whether to invite and when to accept an invitation.

Kit Woolsey:---By my agreements, a balancing 1NT call shows 10-14 HCPs over a one-of-a-minor opening bid, and 10-16 HCPs over a one-of-a-major opening bid. So I guess the answer to both questions would be 10 HCPs. Form of scoring makes no difference at all.

Jeff Rubens:---In all cases, to balance I would need the minimum in valuation required to bid 1NT in the current partnership.

Point No. 2: There are two reasons to balance: to compete for the partscore or bid game. The opponents are more likely to be in a makeable contract when they open one-of-a-major. The experts say that the minimum needed to balance with 1NT over one-of-a-major is ten HCPs, but more points are needed to balance over a minor. Partner already denied some types of hands when the opening was one-of-a-minor, because partner didn't overcall or double.

Chris Compton:---The whole thing in making this decision is vulnerability related. With no one vulnerable, you must balance with ten HCPs because if they have even a 5-2 or 4-3 fit in their major and you have nearly half the HCPs in the deck, you can't go peacefully. It does not matter to me if the opening bid was a diamond, but it is much clearer to bid when it is a major.

Steve Bloom:---I would balance with a good-looking nine count. You don't get rich at matchpoints defending a low-level major suit contract. I tend to be more conservative over 1. Partner did not act, and so, either partner has a poor hand, or diamond length. That said, making 1NT is better than +50 or -70. I would balance if I figure we have a good shot at holding at least half the points in the deck.

David Bird:---With 3334 shape I would need ten points to balance against 1. If you balance on much less than that, it is difficult to determine accurately if your side has game values. When the opening bid was 1, this may well be a poor-scoring contract their way, so I would still require ten points.

Barry Rigal:---xxxQxxKxxAxxx is too light to balance. Throw in one more defensive trick: xxxKxxKxxAxxx would be a dead minimum. With an eleven-count I'd bid 1NT over 1. A ten-count over 1 is dodgy.

Ralph Katz:---This type of question is hard to answer using only the hand you gave us. How good is the field? Who are the opponents? The texture of the hand also matters. Over 1 it would take about a twelve-count to balance and maybe a little less over 1, especially at matchpoints.

Marty Bergen:---I prefer a good ten HCPs to balance. I am more likely to pass 1 because 1 is less likely to be an acceptable contract for them. I balance a bit less at IMPs because too many opponents forget to open 2.

Point No. 3: Another variable is that the opponents might have missed a game.

Eddie Kantar:---After 1 about ten HCPs. Same with 1. At IMPs, 11 or 12 HCPs minimum.

Bob Hamman:---Probably I would balance with 1NT with a reasonable ten-count and spades at least double-stopped: KQ10KJ10xJ10x1098, for example.

Karen Allison:---I would balance with 1NT with a decent ten count and a spade stopper, but not with all queens and jacks.

Jill Meyers:---Over 1 – Pass – Pass, the minimum I would need to make a bid with 3334 distribution is a good 11 HCPs. Over 1 – Pass – Pass I would have 13 HCPs.

Fred Hamilton:---I would balance with 3334 and 10 HCPs at matchpoints, but would need a decent 11+ HCPs at IMPs.

Larry Cohen:---If the four-card suit in the hand with 3334 distribution is hearts, that makes me slightly more likely to act. If the four-card suit is spades, I am less likely to act (and if I do, it will be 1NT). So, over 1, my minimum for balancing with a flat hand would be roughly 11 HCPs. If the opening was 1, that changes matters greatly. Now, we have a chance to play in one-of-a-major. I could picture balancing with some nine-counts, maybe even a prime eight.

Kerry Sanborn:---I would most likely pass anything less than a chunky eleven-count. Over a 1 opener, it wouldn't make much difference, assuming I would be reopening with 1NT. After a 1 opening, game in hearts their way is a real possibility, but after a 1 bid, LHO less often has a good, unbalanced hand that will produce game in four-of-a-major. I would tend to sell out more quickly at IMPs.

Henry Bethe:---I would balance with something like Q10xAJxxxxKJ10x. That is to say a decent eleven-count with some defense against both majors. I am somewhat less aggressive over 1 but more aggressive at IMPs than at matchpoints.

Eddie Wold:---With that distribution, I would only want to balance with 1NT since there is a premium for declaring and not defending at that vulnerability. I would balance with as little as 11 HCPs. The following hand would be my minimum: Q10xKxxAxxQ109x.

Point No. 4: The race to 1NT. If one side can take seven tricks and the other six, it's best if you're the one that is in 1NT.

Bobby Wolff:---With 3334 distribution I would need at least 11 HCPs to balance with 1NT. Over 1 at matchpoints I would need more (a minimum of 12+ HCPs) because of the greater likelihood that the opponents are not in a high scoring contract. At IMPs, I would tend to pass with fewer than 13 HCPs.

Grant Baze:---Matchpoints, non-vulnerable, I would balance with 1NT with an eleven-count: QJxxxxKxxAJ10x. To balance over 1, I would need more to balance with 1NT, about a 13 count, since we are not badly placed defending against 1. Playing IMPs would make a serious difference. I wouldn't balance with 3334 eleven or twelve-counts.

Peter Weichsel:---The minimum hand I would balance with against reasonable opponents would be about a good nine or ten HCPs for a takeout double, if I have three small spades and something sensible in hearts. With a spade stopper I would need a reasonable eleven-count to bid 1NT. As the national or world titles go up on my left and right, so do the requirements for my entering the auction.

When you are 4333, you could bid 1NT over one-of-a-major with ten HCPs, certainly a good ten. However, you need a little more to bid over one-of-a-minor. When it goes one-of-a-major – pass – pass, the opponents are usually in a reasonable spot so you balance more often. After one-of-a-minor – pass – pass, they could be in a 4-1 fit, so you balance less often.