mikeh, on Jul 26 2007, 03:34 PM, said:
Ken posts an auction and does so in the context of 'spot the mistakes' and then posts his analysis which assumes that 'correct' bidding requires inferences drawn from his idiosyncratic preferences.
...
The point is not what, in his system, a bid should mean. It is what it does mean in an undiscussed 2/1 partnership. In such a partnership 'who's to blame' discussion, assigning meanings to 4♦/♥ per his 'personal preference' is almost as stupid as it is irritating.
Again, I could care less what
style of cuebidding one elects to use. The question is whether 4
♥ is an offer to play hearts or is an advanced cue in support of spades (showing whatever your agreements would have it show).
One cannot abdicate the question by forcing a default to "natural" when undiscussed any more than one could abdicate the question by forcing a default to "cuebid" when undiscussed.
Relying upon a general default, like "It must be natural if undiscussed" is not an excuse for not knowing that which others know, if others do in fact "know" something that is being discussed.
Again, as I mentioned, I might have thought that 4
♥, as an advanced cue, was something that would need discussion. However, the word I received was that this is obviously an advanced cue. "Obviously" to those powers-that-be who are my mentors or who are the mentors of my mentors.
Your objections, quite heated at that, sound like the words of the raving people I run into at club games, just at a different level. They might argue that 1
♥-P-2
♥-P-3
♣ as a two-suited game try is esoteric; "You would bid 3
♥ with
that hand -- invitational!"
The reasoning on this hand is really simple. If you have a hand where you might prefer hearts to notrump if partner is 6-4, why are you bidding 2NT and not 3
♦ or 3
♣?!?!?
Oh, and Mikeh... Do you think that the folks in Nashville who discussed this hand before I even heard about it were my students? I take that as great praise indeed! LOL
"Gibberish in, gibberish out. A trial judge, three sets of lawyers, and now three appellate judges cannot agree on what this law means. And we ask police officers, prosecutors, defense lawyers, and citizens to enforce or abide by it? The legislature continues to write unreadable statutes. Gibberish should not be enforced as law."
-P.J. Painter.