SAYC
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Preface

  SAYC (Standard American Yellow Card)
  1. Introduction
  2. Bidding
  3. Opening Bid Evaluation
  4. Opening Bid Options
  5. Scoring
  6. Bidding Strategy

  Statistics
×

Opening Bids

Open 1 Level
   Open  1 ♠ 
   Open  1 ♥ 
       Open  1 NT 
           Open Better Minor
               Open  1 ♦ 
               Open  1 ♣ 
Weak Opening Bids
 •          2 ♦   2 ♥   2 ♠  (6-card suit)
 •  3 ♣   3 ♦   3 ♥   3 ♠  (7-card suit)
 •                  4 ♥   4 ♠  (8-card suit)
Strong Opening Bids
      • Open  2 NT 
      • Open  2 ♣ 
      • Open  3 NT 
Opening vs Table Position
× Respond to Suit Openings
   Guidelines for Responses
         Distribution Points
         Jacoby  2 NT♥ 
         1-over-1 Restriction
   Respond to  1 ♠ 
   Respond to  1 ♥ 
   Respond to  1 ♦ 
   Respond to  1 ♣ 
Bid 3: Opener's Next Bid
   Responder Supports the Bid Suit
         (Respond to Jacoby  2 NT )
   Responder Proposes a New Suit
Respond to Weak Openings
  • Respond to  2 ♠   2 ♥   2 ♦ 
  • Respond to  3 ♠   3 ♥   3 ♦   3 ♣ 
  • Respond to  4 ♠   4 ♥ 
Respond to Strong Openings
  • Respond to  2 ♣  using:
      • 2-Diamond Waiting
      • 3-Point Step
      • 2-Diamond Bust
  • Respond to Strong 2
× Respond to NT Openings
Respond to  1 NT 
    Transfers (1NT)
       Stayman (1NT)
          No 4-card Major (1NT)
Respond to  2 NT 
    Transfers (2NT)
       Stayman (2NT)
          4-card Major (2NT)
Respond to  3 NT 
    Transfers (3NT)
       Stayman (3NT)
          No 4-card Major (3NT)
× Other Bids:
 • Slam (Blackwood & Gerber)
 • Overcalls
 • Doubles
 • Balancing
× Practice Bidding:
   • Open 1 Level
   • Responses to 1 Suit Openings
   • Open 1 NT & 14 Responses
   • Open 1 NT & 16 Responses
   • Responses to 2 Club Opening
   • Overcalls
Practice Websites:
   • SAYC Bidding Practice
   • Trickster
× Taking Tricks:
Leads on Defense
Leads on Offense
    • Finessing a Tenace
× Keeping Score:
1. Contract Points Scoring
2. Match Points Scoring
× Downloads:
SAYC Summary
1-Suit Opening Bids
Responses to 1-Suit Opening Bids
1 NT Openings & Responses
Responses to Weak Openings
Responses to 2 Club Openings

2. Bidding

The purpose of bidding is for the partnership to exchange information about their hands and eventually declare how many of the 13 tricks they will take using one of the five strains to do so.

Bidding Language

The bidding process uses a special language comprised of 39 coded messages where each message has a special meaning. Each player must use one of these 39 coded messages (also known as bids) during the bidding process. Any other form of verbal communication or gesture is considered “table talk”, and is not permitted.

35 of the coded messages are simple 2 syllable phrases. Each phrase is comprised of a number from 1 to 7, and one of five STRAINs. Four of the strains are the four suits in a deck of cards (clubs, diamonds, hearts, and spades) and the fifth is "No Trump" (NT). Examples of these coded messages (or bids) are:  1 ♣ ,  4 ♥ , and  7 NT .

The 36th and 37th coded phrases are “PASS” and "DOUBLE".

Bidding Hierarchy

The 35 coded phrases, or bids, have a bidding hierarchy. The bidding hierarchy, as displayed in the Hierarchy Chart progresses from bottom-left to top-right.
      • Strain hierarchy begins with clubs (the lowest hierarchy of the strains on the left), increases to the right to diamonds, increases to the right to hearts, increases to the right to spades, and is topped by No Trump (the highest hierarchy of the strains on the left).
      • The number hierarchy begins with one (the lowest number hierarchy on the bottom row), and increases by row to seven (the highest number on the top row).

The lowest ranking bid is  1 ♣ , and the highest ranking bid is  7 NT . The bids of PASS and DOUBLE have no hierarchy and do not interfere with the progression of the bidding hierarchy.

Once a bid is announced, the next player cannot use that same bid and cannot use a lower hierarchy bid. Each subsequent bid must be a higher ranking bid than the previous bid. The bidding must progress foward in bidding hierarchy.
Heirarchy Chart

Bid Meaning

         1 ♣  means the partnership will take 7 of 13 tricks using clubs as the trump suit. The number 1 is the level of the contract. The first 6 tricks are referred to as a “book”, and the number 1 is how many tricks in addition to the book the partnership will attempt to win (1 plus 6 = 7).

         4 ♥  means the partnership will take 10 of 13 tricks using hearts as the trump suit. The number 4 is the level of the contract. The first 6 tricks are referred to as a “book”, and the number 4 is how many tricks in addition to the book the partnership will attempt to win (4 plus 6 = 10).

         7 NT  means the partnership will take 13 of 13 tricks without using any suit as the trump suit (hence – no trump). The number 7 is the level of the contract. The first 6 tricks are referred to as a “book”, and the number 7 is how many tricks in addition to the book the partnership will attempt to win (7 plus 6 = 13).

Bidding Process

The bidding process is like a normal auction, in which the various participants making ever increasing bids on an item. The highest bidder wins the item. In this case the bidders vie for a "CONTRACT", hence the name of this card game, Contract Bridge. The contract is the commitment by the partnership to take a certain amount of the 13 tricks using one of the 5 strains.

The dealer begins the bidding process by either making a coded message bid or bidding PASS. The player to the left of the bidder makes a higher ranking coded message bid or bids PASS. This process progresses around the table in a clockwise direction where each player makes a higher ranking coded message bid or bids PASS. After 3 players in succession bid PASS, the bidding session is finished. The last bid (before the 3 successive passes) becomes the “CONTRACT”. The player of this last bid becomes the DECLARER and has committed the partnership to take the declared number of tricks using the declared strain.

Let's learn how to determine the opening bid. Goto the web page for the 3. Opening Hand Evaluation.
1/20/2025
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