mgoetze, on 2014-December-08, 05:00, said:
So, I figured I would give this method (DBL 4+ spades, 1♠ 0-3 spades) a try after our 1♣ opening showing 2+ clubs, usually 11-13 balanced, either minor longer. I also figured that it would be nice to have a nonforcing 2♣ and 2♦ available (6 cards, to play opposite 11-13) and that I could just dump the forcing minor hands in 1♠.
Unfortunately it turns out that quite a few strong hands with a 5-card minor also have 4 spades. Adding those hands in with double seems like an overload (especially since I had been hoping to play system on, 1♣-1♥-X = 1♣-p-1♥ which also shows 4+ spades). Any suggestions what to do with these hands?
After 1
♣ (1
♥) ... I play X = 4 spades and 1
♠ = 0-3 spades, as you are thinking, because it is our normal twalsh bid and we like playing system on. I'm happy with it.
After 1
♣ (1
♥) 1
♠ (p) opener will rebid 1NT on a normal sort of hand without long clubs, and then we rebid :
pass = to play, obviously
2
♣/
♦ = weak, to play **
2
♥/
♠ = invitational with 5+
♣/
♦ respectively
... (a 6 card minor will convert a 2NT declination into 3m)
2NT = natural invitation
3
♣/
♦ = GF
All of the above sequences are where responder does not have 4 spades. Where he has, it is just system on starting with X, so why not treat the strong 4x{5x} however you do normally with no second seat interference? Responder's bid of X takes no more room than his bid of 1
♥ would.
Not that it may be particularly relevant for you, but for us X = 4 spades exactly, less than invitational, because we play 1
♣ (1
♥) 1NT/2
♣/
♦/
♥/
♠ to describe other types of spade holdings, as the minors are indeed rolled into the 1
♠ reply.
** If you were not wanting to use the immediate 2
♣/
♦ response as artificial, then it is of course better to have the weak hands bidding this directly, as it allows opener support after 4th seat raises.