Little Major
The Little Major is a bridge bidding system devised primarily by Terence Reese.
Origins
The concept for "the Little Major" was born late in 1962 while Reese was en route to a tournament in the Canary Islands with Boris Schapiro. First with Schapiro and then with Jeremy Flint, Reese created the bidding system over concern about the emergence of artificial bidding systems and as "an Awful Warning of what might happen if every country playing international championships were to arrive with its own wholly artificial system". That objective was soon overtaken by events and the system "was found in itself to be extremely interesting".Reese promulgated three general principles:
- Aggressive openings on all hands that are ill-equipped for competition. All such defenceless hands are opened 1 or higher.
- Early definition of range and type. Opening suit bids from 1 to 2 are precise as to range and pattern.
- Extension of bidding vocabulary through use of relay bids and two-way bids.
Features
The meanings of opening bids are as follows:Described for 'the first time' in Reese's book Bridge Conventions Finesses and Coups, it was also described in the Bridge Magazine on two occasions, the last in the August 1969 issue. An 11-page summary is presented in the 1968 book by Reese and Albert Dormer Bridge For Tournament Players.