Posted 2013-February-21, 13:06
If I open this hand 2♣ because systemically that's the call for it, and then bid game-in-my-suit because systemically that's the call for it, how have I not used the methods as well as possible? Partner knows exactly what I have (okay, not *where* my outside cards are, but what he needs for slam) and will bid appropriately. With two aces and a trump void, say, or even an ace-king and a protectable king (and either that same void or a singleton)...I'm not screwing around, I'm bidding my hand just the same as 1♣ Precision-4♦ showing a 12+, 3+control, 4=1=4=4 isn't screwing around, having taken up three levels of bidding with a slam-suitable hand.
The problem is with 2♣ as a preemptive weapon when not correctly disclosed, not with the game jump. The game jump is a descriptive call that is nothing if not constructive. Part of the power of an overstrength preemptive hand opening 2♣ is that it impedes the opponents, like any preempt, by taking up space, but also by offering the possibility - the likelihood, in fact - that opener has the traditional "I can set any game you bid, in my hand" hand. Given that the ACBL has declared that "strong means whatever strong means" is legal means that it's ethical as well. HOWEVER, failing to be actively forward in disclosing this tendency, by not making it clear on the card (and my personal belief is that "22 or 8.5 PT" isn't sufficiently clear; most players will assume enough defence even in the 8.5 PT hand), and not making the possibility clear on ask, increases said power dramatically, in the same way that failing to disclose Forget Transfers correctly gains when you pick off the opponents' heart suit, even though the convention-as-played (1NT-2♦ "hearts or diamonds") is legal and will in itself pick off the opponents' heart suit even if correctly disclosed. And that increase is both unethical (if done on purpose) and illegal (whether or not there was any intent).
Unfortunately, the ACBL has not made it *easy* - to the point of possibly not being *possible* to make this one clear. So we get this, againe and againe.
Please note: none of the above should e taken as support for playing the convention this way as *good*; I think it's bad bridge and will, when properly disclosed, be -EV against any class of player that doesn't equate 2♣ with "uncontested auction". And part of the problem with this is that the players learning this style from their partners and opponents *are* usually the above class of player, and it works against their peers, and catches out the stronger players (isn't there a chapter in Simon called "Fixed...By Palookas!"?) But I play a lot of bad conventions too, and they're legal...
When I go to sea, don't fear for me, Fear For The Storm -- Birdie and the Swansong (tSCoSI)