Kalvan14, on Nov 10 2005, 05:49 PM, said:
2♣. This hand is too strong in controls and can make 4♠ against xxx in ♠ and a doubleton club. in any case my 2♣ includes this kind of hands, and, if pard is weak and in misfit, i can play 2♠ [2♣-2♠-P or 2♣-2♥-2♠-P]
As Justin said, posts that say: 'in my specialized method, this hand is easy' do nothing to advance our understanding of the issues raised by the post.
I am not attacking your method (I do not know enough about it to do so), but it has nothing to do with the thread.
And observing that game is good opposite xxx - xx in the blacks, with nothing else, is also unhelpful. Would partner know to commit to game with that, and not with xxx
♠ xx
♥/
♦??? Would you be able to tell that he held xx
♣ and not xxx??
The problem is not susceptible to a right or wrong answer approach. It is, however, useful for prompting a discussion of how various players (with a wide range of experience and skill levels) approach this everyday evaluation problem in the context of a standardish method.
I prefer 1
♠, but I would not criticize a partner who chose 2
♣: as I pointed out in my first post, a minor change to the hand could get me to vote for 2
♣ myself.
I and my partners stretch to respond. If you need 6 hcp to respond, then open 2
♣. If you would bid 1N (on the way to 2
♠) with Qxx Jxxxx Qxx xx, then open 1
♠.
If you bid aggressively in response to a 2
♣ opener (I do) then open 1
♠: I would, as partner, assume opener's hand was slightly stronger than this and thus might push a level too high in my slam hunt.
Those two factors are roughly equal, with the balance favouring 2
♣. But what tips the scale for me is the presence of opponents. It is highly probable that one or the other will bid if I open 1
♠. If It goes PPP, then there is a good probabilty that we have no fit: RHO will strain to reopen with short
♠, so a pass is an indicator (not an assurance) of
♠ length.