helene_t, on 2014-February-22, 17:15, said:
You certainly could, although it might be hard to argue that a minimum
weak two in clubs is stronger than a balanced 11.
What I said is that I would fall back to a meaning of 1NT that would conform
the regulations: some types of strong hands or a regular, but limited,
club opening. So the only question that could arise would be: am I
permitted to make a light opening in clubs (possibly with just 9 HCP),
and pass a balanced hand of 11 HCP? Since people are doing this all
the time, whatever their bidding system, I have concluded that the
regulations don't speak just the hcp language.
A problem with the regulations however remains, in the sense that
they may achieve precisely the opposite of what they were meant for in
the first place. Consider my position now:
1. I want to express a weak two in clubs with the 1NT bid, for a
series of reasons (pragmatical, logical, aestethical, and so on)
2. I can't do that, for the regulation says I need at least 8 HCP for
a level 1 opening (sadly, the law doesn't bother that mine is,
logically, a level 2 opening)
3. I try to remedy by defining the club weak two as promising 5 clubs
and 8-11 hcp - an opening more akin to the Fantunes two-bids, just
a bit weaker
4. This would satisfy me, but, alas, the regulation says also that an
opening bid at the one level may not be weaker than pass.
5. As it happens I am able to steal one more bid from my "true" level
one openings
6. Therefore, I set up to use 1
♠ for the balanced 8-11 hcp hands. I
do not deem such hands worth to be opened, it is the Regulation
that pushes me to do it.
7. OK, now my pass is 0-7 hcp, weakest then any of the level one
openings, and the regulation should not complain
Or could it? At the bottom I'm left with an inescapable opening bid,
which in its turm must be tested for regularity. The 1
♥ opening,
pushed in the corner by my acrobatic attempts to comform to the
regulation, must be defined in the following negative terms: it
promises opening strength (26+ zar points) and denies 4+-card
majors. It is a brave heart indeed, but the bidding vocabulary does
permit the auction to develop normally. The point is whether the
Regulation permits it. For, while not making direct statements about
suits, it is implied that hands so opened may be, among other
hand-types, one-suiters in ether clubs or diamonds. May this
contraddict article 2.2.e, which says that when "By partnership agreement
an opening bid at the one level shows either length in one specified
suit or length in another", then it is HUM?