cherdano, on 2013-June-09, 09:39, said:
West made a horrible bid, causing him a terrible result. Logically, this means that your 2NT opener is a GREAT CONVENTION!
A fair amount of players use a 2NT opener to show 5/5 in the minors and 5-10 HCP. Now this use for me has surely got to significantly worse than showing 5/5 in the majors. Not only have you given the opponents the hand layout and HCP distribution, defending this is simple. One method I've seen (and like) is:
1. X for takeout to the majors, majors are equal in length
2. 3
♣ = both majors,
♥ longer than
♠
3. 3
♦ = both majors,
♠ longer than
♥
Having tipped off the opponents as to the hand layout they are now in a position to bid and make thin games in the majors. Partner is going to be finessed for any missing high cards in the majors.
The convention in the OP has lifted the lower end requirement from 5 HCP to 8 HCP. The upper end has been lifted from 10 HCP to 12 HCP. So for starters you already have more HCP than the one used showing both minors. But the more significant issue here is that you are pushing the opponents to at least the 4-level if they want to fight for the part score. Firstly it is riskier to go to the 4-level unsure of what partner may have in support, and secondly, it is obviously easier to defeat a contract at the 4-level than what it is to defeat a contract at the 3-level when the HCP seem to be spread more or less evenly or the spread is unsure. And I think that is where we are picking up many good results in partials.
We have been playing the convention in the OP since early 2013. So far using it has come up 11 times or so. 10 out of 11 we got a good result. The 11th was due to idiotic declarer play by myself not thinking about the line of play to be taken. So that failure was not due to the convention. Instead it was due to human error.
As soon as our opponents figure out a good defence to this and our bad results start outweighing the good results, only then will we change to something else.