Hi guys!
I've done a ton of reading along these lines recently, a combination of offline and online
info. By far the best SAYC page I've seen (which comes in PDF form) may be found at:
http://www.annam.co.uk/sayc.htm
Here are the key elements in SAYC, though I'll break them down by 'difficulty'/'popularity' level:
BASIC -- the ones you mentioned in an above post
- 5 card majors for the opening
- 1NT for 15-17, 1 suit and rebid 2NT = 18-19, 2NT opening = 21-22, 2C then 2NT rebid = 23-24, 3NT=25-27
- Stayman convention to response to a 1NT opening
- Blackwood convention
- Takeout doubles
- Weak Two opening bids with 2C as the strong opening
BASIC-INTERMEDIATE
- Negative doubles
- Jacoby Transfers in the majors (*very* common and very useful)
- Jacoby 2NT response to a 1-major opening (very useful)
- Limit raises (1H-3H as 10-12 pts, invitational. This goes along with the use of Jacoby 2NT for 13+)
- Michaels Cuebid
- Unusual 2NT
INTERMEDIATE
- Cuebid after overcall as a limit raise (so 1H-1S-3S is now preemptive, not a limit raise of 10-12)
- Quantitative 4NT
- Gerber
- DOPI
- Inverted Minors
- Fourth suit forcing
INTERMEDIATE-ADVANCED (not part of SAYC but the next ones that folks add. Don't worry about these now!
- DONT
- Drury (or Reversed Drury)
- Lebensohl
- New Minor Forcing
- Roman Key card Blackwood
- Texas Transfers
A more basic link for evaluating a hand and basic bidding, plus the easiest of the items above, is:
http://www.rpbridge.net/bgtc.htm Another good link in this category is:
http://www.math.cornell.edu/~belk/bridge.htm
There's really nothing 'Advanced' in SAYC, and the list of other toys not included in the above
is vast. The nice thing is that the conventions and techniques listed above work very well *togehter*
and the chance that a non-newbie online bridge player will know them is extremely high.
If not all the above are familiar (much probably isn't) - the key is to add one or two things at a time
and get comfortable with them and "KISS". We can dial down/up to whatever level folks are comfortable with. Pete, you mentioned wanting to get back into Precision. *If* I can continue to find time for this (which I want to but have had a bad record in the past few weeks), that's something I would be interested in. (I should mention the most popular system of that type, a strong 1C, is the Polish Club rather than Precision, but I think the latter has merit from ease of learning and use. The downside to Precision these days is how wildly aggressive the opponents have gotten in interfering after a strong 1C opening. An online link to a modern interpretation of precision with a TON of notes is Key Lime Precision:
http://www.geocities.com/keylimeprecision/ I still have an OLD paperback by Wei on Simplified Precision :P )
BTW, if there is interest I've put together a pretty lengthy overview of SAYC + a few other conventions in a formatted word doc, and could share that. It's more a table summarizing bids and meaning with responses, not explanations per se, so Anna's page above is better for understaning such conventions. I just wanted to have the actual bids in one place for my own review.
Hoping Mrs C has no plans tonight...
Charis