monikrazy, on 2014-January-15, 14:39, said:
2H may or may not be a good call, but the reason I'm suggesting it has nothing to do with the opener's fit.
K&R rates responder's hand 13.25 and worth an open on its own merit. Yes, playing 2/1 GF pairs may end up in some questionable 3N contracts but it seems worth it for the chance to properly describe the shape. We also may be able to stop in 4D if 3N is not feasible.
Forcing NT makes discovering the right game very difficult with our shape hand. Responder is placed in a bad spot if opener bids 2C and a (less) bad spot if opener bids 2S. Even 3S as the example showed. Again, if forcing NT is the mechanism we are supposed to invite game with and still struggles this much with a very good, near max hand to invite, on balance it appears we do much better just treating it like a GF hand. Bridge is a game that encourages bidding game after all.
An evaluation method that looks only at our hand is not a tool any intelligent player relies upon once the auction has started.
I personally wouldn't consider this to be an opening hand, altho were I to be 5-5 majors, I might well do so. Having seen partner's 1
♠ call, it is trivial to see that my stiff spade has gone from being a potential asset to being a bit of a liability....and if you choose to emphasize your long suits, then the news that partner has long spades reduces the chances of a red suit fit so you can downgrade a bit for that reason.
If your argument is that overbidding is acceptable because we can't find a 5-3 heart fit should partner respond 2
♣ to our 1N, may I suggest that there are very playable solutions to that problem. I would accept that BART, for example, is too much to expect of an I player but surely not of an advanced player.
If BART or other gadgets were unavailable, I'd still be bidding over 2
♣. 2N springs to mind, since any decent player, even non expert, knows to bid 3
♥ on the way to 3N. Please don't argue that 2N would be an overbid.....you've just finished advocating an immediate game force! No invitational sequence can be described as overbidding by someone who sees the responding hand as game forcing.
More to the point: advising people to make gross overbids to avoid the 5-3 heart problem is just bad advice on a number of levels.
Not only will it lead to silly, hopeless games (that can sometimes be doubled) when partner has his usual misfitting minimum opener, but it can lead to silly high-level contracts when partner thinks you have your values. Should partner now or later begin to play you to be making gameforces with misfitting 10 counts, then you'll avoid those overbids, but now you start missing good contracts when you really do hold a gameforce hand.
IOW, the wider the range of an initial action, the less precise subsequent actions become and the more difficulty the partnership will have. There are times when accepting this sort of cost is better than the alternative, but this is not one of those cases imo.
Once again, I can't help but think that those who advocate a 2/1 gf response of 2
♥ may be influenced by knowing what we will find in dummy.....I am not suggesting this is a conscious bias, nor am I purporting to state that this is actually playing a role in your thinking, but I have learned that in BBF, a significant number of posters, none of whom appear to be in real life world class, always advocate calls that happen to work on the problem as posted. If all such posters really were that good, I'd expect to have seen their names in print somewhere.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari