aguahombre, on 2016-November-20, 09:15, said:
These top class players never find responder with a 5-3-1-4 Zero-count. We mere mortals can expect that if we bid 3♦.
Responder does sometimes hold that hand, but given the auction has started 1NT (P) 2H (P) in tempo (even behind screens) then the opponents are pretty unlikely to hold a combined 25 count.
And if partner does have that hand, will your choice of action even matter? You're never making 2S, maybe you go -3 in 3D when you would've gotten out for -2 in 2S. Maybe bidding 3D saves you from the takeout double into penalty pass that would've happened to 2S. Maybe bidding 3D stops them balancing into game?
The actual losing scenario is when responder holds a 6-3-1-4 5-count with good spades and 2S was making but 3D doesn't.
Obviously you should decide based on the whole hand whether the upside (partner holding 6-8 with a fitting diamond card and bidding a good 3NT) is worth the downside (going off in 3D when 2S is making). You're always allowed to just accept the transfer like everybody else.
rhm, on 2016-November-23, 05:16, said:
Top class?
I doubt that very much. Second rated players maybe. This is even worse than all this super-accept doubleton nonsense.
The idea behind transfers is that the unlimited hand can decide whether to proceed or stop.
rhm: I've read/responded to enough of your posts to understand that you struggle with communication. Let me rework your first couple of sentences into normal, respectful, English.
"Using 3m as a natural, invitational is unusual, I haven't heard of any top class players using that method. Perhaps a better use for the bid would be to show a sub-minimum opening with long suit?"
At this point you might qualify that you've not recently played in any high-level international events, so you are expressing just your opinion and have no idea whether top players may or may not use these methods.
The ironic thing is that I actually agree with most of the other points in your post.
I haven't personally tried the 3m showing a natural invite method so I can't back up its usefulness with any personal experiences. I was simply offering it as an additional caveat to the underlying idea that super-accepts (especially in spades) are best used infrequently and generically.