wank, on 2015-March-05, 10:25, said:
i'm inviting at the 2 level. there is space between that and game to differentiate on marginal hands. i fail to see where this is in trouble compared to your method where you have a tighter range but you're inviting at the 3 level. i play IJS so it's irrelevant to me, but i still prefer this method to your's.
Ok, so a rebid of 2
♠ is not 'invitational', but is either constructive or invitational, and you have space to differentiate between the two types. Fair enough.
Of course, sometimes opener has enough to want to be in game opposite an invite and so needs to force to the 3-level, only to find out that 8 tricks were the limit opposite a minimum constructive rebid.
I'm not claiming that your method is silly or terrible, but I do think that you tend to underestimate the problems inherent in making a 2
♠ rebid so wide range. Maybe the reason you do this is that you don't in fact play either my method or the method you claim is better. You instead play a different method that will surely have its own problems, which will be different from the problems of my method or the one you described.
For example, the idea that one can play transfers at the 4-level over a 3
♥ raise of the FSF 2
♥ (as suggested by another poster) bid works well until one realizes that to show clubs one must pre-empt the auction to 4
♥, losing half a level of bidding precisely when one would likely most want to be able to show or deny a diamond control. It may well be that the gains from the 4
♣ and 4
♦ calls outweigh the cost of the 4
♥ call (and I suspect they do), but one shouldn't rush into adopting this 'solution' without thinking about whether we can justify this cost, or whether other solutions may be better or easier to remember (a problem for partnerships that don't play very often).
What all of this brings into focus is that there are no free lunches when it comes to 'fixing' bidding problems that arise from systemic choices. Every choice we make in system design ripples through the rest of the system to some degree, and every method has flaws.
At the end of the day, almost any reasonably well-thought out method, which takes into account the integration of the gadget into the system, will work well enough that one would need to be unlucky to have a hand arise in which one's methods consistently cost compared to the methods chosen by others. It is more important for the partnership to be comfortable with its methods than for the methods to be some unascertainably perfect solution. You like your methods and I like mine, and should we ever play a long match against each other, I suspect that the differences in method would have little impact on the outcome, or if they did, such would likely be random in either direction. Card play and judgment would almost certainly carry far more weight.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari