The Strong Club Bidding System
for the Game of Bridge


Welcome to a short history of the Strong Club bidding system.
This is a system based on a strong and forcing one club opening bid.


This is not the Precision bidding system, nor is it one of the older strong club systems.  This is a modern version of a way of bidding that has been part of bridge since its inception, starting with the Vandenbilt club.
      -Roy Wilson


A long time ago...
In the early 1920s Harold Vanderbilt devised a strong club system which came to be known as the Vanderbilt Club.  A few years later it was surpassed by the Schenken Club, which became an alternate for the Standard American system used by most players in the U.S.  In Europe, the Neapolitan and Blue Team Club systems were the preferred forcing club methods.  All of these older systems were built around a strong one club opening and four card majors, although the Europeans tended to favor a canapé style of bidding, which requires the second bid suit to be longer than the first one.  Strong club systems have never been a popular choice, though, in either Europe or the United States.

In 1963 an improved system was developed by Mr. C.C. Wei with some help from Alan Truscott and several friends.  It became known as the Precision Club, and was used successfully by the Taiwan team for three consective years in 1967, 1968, and 1969 in the Far East Championships.  That team also reached the finals again in 1970.

C.C. Wei sponsored a number of top-level teams in the United States so he could popularize his Precision bidding system.  The system was so successful that it was adopted by some of the very best players in the United States as well as many lesser players who wanted to step away from the standard methods.

In 1972, the Famed Italian Blue Team came out of retirement to enter the World Team Olympiad where the entire team used versions of Precision.  Giorgio Belladonna and Benito Garozzo, the top pair, had a modified version called Super Precision.  They won the event with an overwhelming lead.  Precision had arrived.

Today the two highest ranked players in US history, Jeff Meckstroth and Eric Rodwell, play their own heavily modified version of Precision.  The late Paul Soloway played Precision, but had his own form of the system.  Although Precision is a favorite with top players, most of the players in the American Contract Bridge League today are using either Max Hardy's version of Two-Over-One, or Mike Lawrence's slightly different version of that system.  In spite of the system's success at the highest levels of play, strong club systems are still not very popular in the world.  (Players say... Too complicated!    It's not.  It's just different.)

What are the advantages or disadvantages?
Primarily the major strengths of any strong club system are:
  • Highly accurate in auctions where there is a possibility of slam.  This is because the bidding starts at the very lowest level of one club and provides better methods of exchanging information.
  • All opening bids other than one club have a narrower range of points than standard forms of bidding, making judgments easier in both constructive and competitive situations.

  • And the acknowledged weakness of any forcing club system is that good opponents are prone to bid aggressively with weak hands over a 1 opening so as to take away bidding room.
  • Another problem is the ambiguity caused by the opening bid of 1, which may be as short as a singleton.  Players who use a forcing club system find that perhaps as many as 40% of the hands are opened with this catch-all bid.  Unfortunately, the bid carries almost no information, other than to announce at 11-16 points.  (Well, it does imply there is no 5-card suit anywhere in the hand, but the bid simply does not convey much information.  My partners and I believe we have found an excellent set of agreements for responding to 1, which we call ROOD - Responding Over Our Diamond.)  This agreement is incorperated into this updated system.

Just for the record...
Critics of Precision and other strong club systems question the wisdom of combining a strong club with 5-card majors.  If you require a 5-card suit to open either 1 or 1 you will find that a large number of of hands must be opened with a 1 call, including an occasional hand with only a singleton diamond.  There's nothing wrong with 4-card major systems, and bidding them solves many of the opening bid problems caused by the ambiguity of the diamond opening bid.   Even so, 4-card majors are not popular with most players.
    This is so absurd that I wish to go on record in stating that the Big Club cannot be played with any hope of success if you attempt to use it by bidding only 5-card majors.  That agreement causes more problems than it solves.
          Howard Schenken, "Howard Schenken's Big Club," Simon and Schuster, 1968

    My opinion on Precision is that combining five-card majors with a forcing club is like trying to mix oil and water,
    the combination causes serious structural defects."

          Bob Hamman in "Conversations with the Bridge Masters," Master Point Press, 1999
Although those were the opinions of experts long ago, almost all modern players today are using 5-card majors.

The bidding agreements described on this website will provide you with a modern system that borrows from both Precision and Two-Over-One, but has some unique agreements not found in either of those two systems.

Where possible, I will show you different methods and let you decide which you prefer.







Roy Wilson    



Since September 02, 2017 -- You are Visitor Number   5436