Free, on 2013-March-16, 08:39, said:
Hi Joris, welcome to the forums and thanks for writing about this topic. My partner and I are thinking about adopting the method because it does sound interesting. That's why I started a discussion here, to see if there's anything we've missed.
Even the invitational hands WITH fit aren't handled in a good way either imo. 2♥-3♦ as an invite with either M doesn't sound attractive. But I was wondering if you use 2♥-3♠ a lot for preemptive purposes. If not, then isn't it better to play this sequence as some invitational hand (like INV with 5+♠), and make 3♦ more ♥ oriented (or possibly some ♠ invite with exactly 4♠ looking for the best contract)?
Even the invitational hands WITH fit aren't handled in a good way either imo. 2♥-3♦ as an invite with either M doesn't sound attractive. But I was wondering if you use 2♥-3♠ a lot for preemptive purposes. If not, then isn't it better to play this sequence as some invitational hand (like INV with 5+♠), and make 3♦ more ♥ oriented (or possibly some ♠ invite with exactly 4♠ looking for the best contract)?
Thanks for bringing the theory abroad!
A good idea to use 3♦ for invitational with hearts only. In fact it is not a big difference from what I already play, since opener is allowed to bid 4♠ over 2♥-3♠ with a decent hand with four spades. For other readers, the schedule I published in the article was:
2♥-3♦ (invitational for 4M)
3♥: minimum for hearts (if partner bids 3 spades, you can still raise)
3♠: maximum for hearts, minimum for spades (I would not use this often as a spade contract may be wrongsided and you may give information about your shape)
3NT: maximum (if partner has a general slam try and were just looking for (super)min/max he can bid 4 clubs for hearts and 4 diamonds for spades).
Frankly, I haven't seen the bidding 2♥-3♠ as barrage so far, so I think it is OK to remove the 3♠ response after 3♦. That would mean that we will bid 3♠ with an (light) invitational hand. I still think it's good to bid 3♦ with a strong invitational hand. You can show the spades after 3♥ MIN with 3♠ and bid 4♠ after 3NT MAX (or 4♥ MAX if you prefer to play it that way) and it doesn't give up anything.
Oh, and another advantage of the K2 compared to 2♦/2♥ as majors: the bidding is more likely to end after 2♥.
My favorite bidding sequence of the convention is 2♥-3♥, which is putting a lot of pressure on the opponents. What should double mean? Take out with spades? Take out but having spades is not necessary? Just points? I don't know the solution and I'm glad not to face that problem. Yet...