gordontd, on 2013-March-20, 09:03, said:
The answer is that it's alertable if not for takeout. In both cases the 2♠ bid shows willingness in the context of the auction to play in spades.
A 1
♠ opening, overcall, or response to 1m shows a willingness to play in spades.
A raise, a preference bid or even a false preference bid shows a willingness to play in spades -
in the context of the auction.
To me, and most other players, accepting a Jacoby transfer to spades does not show willingness to play in spades, and it certainly doesn't when the context of the auction comes into play.
- Opener normally has shown at least a doubleton spades by opening 1NT, which -I suppose- shows a certain willingness to play in spades.
- Then responder's 2♥ shows responder's willingness to play in spades.
- By accepting the transfer opener doesn't show any additional willingness to play in spades. So, in the context of the auction, 2♠ does not show willingness to play in spades.
1NT showed willingness to play in spades, 2
♥ did that even more, but 2
♠ is the only bid in the auction that doesnot show any willingness to play in spades. Keep in mind that I can only show my own hand, I can't show partner's hand.
If anything, 2
♠ denies (or tends to deny) willingness to play in spades - in the context of the 1NT opening. Many players will make some other bid if they want to show willingness to play in spades, that is: more willingness than they have shown in the context of the 1NT opening. Nigel's second case dealt specifically with that: a 2
♠ rebid that denied showing willingness to play in spades.
So, depending on the partnership agreements and style, 2
♠ either shows that you
don't have any willingness to play in spades or it doesn't show anything at all. But it never shows a willingness to play in spades (and certainly not in the context of the auction).
What you mean to say is that 2
♠ is a bid that -due to the context of the auction- may well
designate the denomination of the final contract or may well be passed out with the opener's side landing in at least a 7 card fit. But that is entirely different from "showing a willingness to play in spades".
Rik
I want my opponents to leave my table with a smile on their face and without matchpoints on their score card - in that order.
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