Bridge Game

Acol

Bridge card game, the most popular card game in the world

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Acol

Acol is a bridge bidding system. It is the name of a road in Hampstead, London, where there was a bridge club in which the system started to evolve in the 1930s. It was popularised in Britain by Iain Macleod in his book "Bridge is an Easy Game", published in 1952. The Acol system is continually evolving but the underlying principle is to keep the bidding as natural as possible. It is common in the British Commonwealth but rarely played in America.

Bidding system structure

The choice between a weak 1NT opening (12-14 points, balanced) and a strong 1NT (15-17 points, balanced) influences much of the rest of the system.

Acol is an approach forcing system - whether or not a bid is forcing, i.e. systemically requires a response, depends on the previous bidding (approach). This is in contrast to level forcing systems, such as 2-over-1, where the level of the bid determines whether or not it is forcing.

It is also classified as a natural system, i.e. opening bids and responses almost always promise at least four cards in the suit. It is a four-card major system, unlike Standard American or European systems where, to open 1H or 1S, five cards in the suit are required.

Acol makes extensive use of limit bids. A limit bid is a bid which describes the hand in terms of both distribution and point count. A player making a limit bid has completely described his hand and may pass next round unless partner makes a forcing bid. A typical limit bid is the 1NT opening. Here the opener promises a limited point count (12-14 for a weak NT) and a particular distribution (4-3-3-3, 4-4-3-2 or 5-3-3-2). Responder now has a more or less complete picture of the partnership's combined strength and distribution and expects opener to pass any non-forcing and non-invitational bid.

Acol Variants

A version of Acol - called "Standard English" - has been developed by the English Bridge Union (EBU) to facilitate the learning of bridge and to provide a natural bidding system for novices and intermediate players. This system uses the Weak 1NT opening (12-14 points). Conventions such as Stayman and Blackwood convention are included. Players may choose to use Jacoby transfers as they progress their experience.

Benjaminised (Benji) Acol replaces the 2H and 2S openings with weak two bids (5-9 points and a 6 card suit). Any Acol 2 hand (8 winners with a given suit as trumps) is shown by bidding 2C which forces a 2D response allowing the suit to be shown. A 2D opener shows any hand with 23+ points.

Reverse Benji is the same as Benji except that the 2C and 2D bids are switched over. 2C is now the strongest bid as in standard Acol.

Standard Acol

The following is a brief summary of Standard Acol.

Opening bids

Opening bids promise at least 12 high card points (HCP), or the equivalent in HCP and shape. Apart from NT, opening bids guarantee the ability to make a rebid over any forcing response from partner.

Responses to 1 of a suit

Responses to 1 NT

Responses to 2 NT

Responses to 2 C

Responses to 2 of a suit

Opener's suit rebid after one-level opening

Opener's NT rebid after one-level opening

(The following bids assume a weak NT opening)

After suit response at one level the traditional rebids are:

However, the modern approach modifies the ranges for the rebids thus:

After a suit response at two level the traditional rebids are:

The modern approach is to use the 2NT rebid as forcing and use 3NT as 15-17 with support for the minor that responder has bid (one option).

After the 2NT (forcing) rebid, either bid naturally or use an enquiry (3c) to seek definition of the 2NT rebid.

Fourth suit forcing

A bid of the fourth suit at the 2 level by responder is a one round force, usually asking opener to bid no trumps with a stopper in the fourth suit. A fourth suit bid at the 3 level is similar, but forcing to game.

References

Standard English http://www.ebu.co.uk/education/standard_english/default.htm

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