Inverted Minors
Overview
The case for Inverted Minors is fairly well understood.
Any time opponents open 1-minor which is raised to 3-minor, we know we're
probably onto a winner if they're not using Inverted Minors - it means opener is
guessing as to where to go next. Quite often the result of the guess will be
3NT, which may be right and may be wrong. Andrew Kambites summarises the
arguments in this English Bridge article.
Points To Observe
- if opponents intervene with either an overcall or a double, inverted
minors are off the menu
- if our opening bid is 1♣, which may
be a 3-card suit, responder needs at least five clubs to raise to 3♣
- the sequence 1♣ - Pass -1NT almost
always shows a hand which is 6-9 with 3-3-3-4 distribution. The same might
apply if diamonds is opener's suit where responder has 3-3-4-3 distribution
- where responder raises opener's minor suit to either the two or three
level, this denies a 4-card major, so a rebid by opener of a major suit is
showing a stop rather than length.