Strong Notrump After Passing (SNAP)

Strong Notrump After Passing (SNAP) is a contract bridge bidding convention originated by Jeremy Flint and Tony Priday [1] and is a one notrump bid by a passed hand in response to a one-level opening by his partner. It shows a relatively balanced hand with 9-12 high card points (HCP) and no five-card major that could have been bid at the one-level. The convention is intended to keep the contract at a low level when opener has a light or minimum hand. Accordingly, its application is more suited to part-score competitive bidding in matchpoint scoring.

When using SNAP, a 2NT response shows a balanced limit jump raise in opener's suit.

Limitations

Responding hands containing 6-8 points are problematic, especially if partner opens in spades. Some 6 point hands are passed and some 8 point hands are bid at the two-level.

gollark: Not *per* hour.
gollark: Milliampere-hours.
gollark: No, worse.
gollark: Have I ever mentioned that mAh are an awful, *awful* unit?
gollark: I'm planning to get a PinePhone when my new (well, not *new*, current) phone's battery degrades enough that it's even less usable.

See also

References

  1. Francis, Henry G.; Truscott, Alan F.; Frey, Richard L.; Hayward, Diane, eds. (1984). The Official Encyclopedia of Bridge (4th ed.). New York: Crown Publishers, Inc. p. 415. ISBN 0-517-55272-8. LCCN 84001791.


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