PhantomSac, on 2015-May-03, 23:53, said:
Almost all of the thread seems to agree with you so it is more likely I'm wrong. BBF is a biased sample in these issues though, but it is pretty overwhelming.
I would be pretty surprised if many top players opened 4S though, not that that makes it wrong (and awm in particular has posted that many more strong hands should be opened 4S iirc, and the pavlicek thing that says of hands that people on vugraph opens 1M or 4M, 4M is a big winner).
Just seems super gambley with such a good hand that includes "THE BOSS SUIT." I am on board with opening 4M w/r with tons of weak hands in first seat (like any 7-4, any 7321 with a good suit), but I don't like it with good hands that don't need that much for slam. Obviously saying "thirteen points" is unreasonable since stiff Q is not worth much, but stiff Q does make it a worse 4S bid for many reasons imo.
4S puts pressure on them but it will be hard to punish them when they're wrong, our hand is so good that partner is not very likely to rip them. And it's not so good that 4S X AP is a great scenario (like if we had 9 solid spades and out or something like that). We have some good defense vs 4H/3N, and we have a good hand for slam that we will obviously miss a lot with 4S, I really don't like the added pressure with a hand like this with so many downsides.
I guess if it was a BBF field I would dislike this action a lot less from my teammate, but in a normal field I think very few people open 4S and it is a totally random action (which is ok with big +EV but tbh I find it -EV even in a vacuum) so I wouldn't really like to deal with the swings of that.
I am sure you are not a curmudgeon, but I believe you are wrong even for expert circles.
If there would be no counter arguments to 4
♠ the issue would not have been raised.
I am not of the school, which says "preempts work" , I lean more towards Rosenberg's view "preempts sometimes work."
But look at examples from
http://www.rpbridge.net/9x15.htm
and Pavlicek's observation: "Evidence clearly favors the preempt, though available data is limited."
The conservative way you treat the boss suit makes it unlikely that the other room would open 1
♠ when you would bid 4
♠, so your spade preempts would not show up in Pavlicek's statistics.
However, your partner may be in a more comfortable position when you do open 4
♠ than when your more aggressive counterpart does the same on the same hand in the other room.
Again this does not show up in Pavlicek's data.
Whether to open this hand with 4
♠ boils down to judgement, whether in the long run you are likely to gain more and more often than you would loose.
It is like any other judgement call you have to choose. That is Bridge.
It has nothing to do with gambling or recklessness or swinging.
Some tolerance to different views seems indicated.
Rainer Herrmann