Posted 2014-December-02, 14:52
As others have noted, this is simply not the sort of situation for which support doubles were invented. Actually they were invented, iirc, because a former partner of Rodwell liked to respond to an opening bid in 3 card spade suits, so Rodwell needed a way to show spade support without committing to the dread mini-moysian 3-3 fit.
Since partner promised 5+ hearts, we can raise with 3, so we don't need to double to show 3.
I like double as penalty because it simplifies the auction.
We will on occasion hold a penalty double and unless double is penalty, we have to pass and hope partner reopens with a double. While he will reopen, with us being in a gf, there will be some hands on which he would not double because he has other features to show, and deems it more useful to show them than to assume we hold the low-frequency penalty double hand.
Thus there is some risk that we cannot get the penalty if we don't play it as such. On the flip side, if we have an unbalanced hand without a penalty double holding, we just bid our hand, and if we hold a balanced hand without much in clubs, we pass.
Partner will reopen and we can then bid 3N if that seems appropriate, showing a stopper or two but no interest in defending, or bid something else.
The gain from helene's preference, it seems to me, is that on occasion partner can convert our double, but generally speaking the hand under the overcall is less able to extract a penalty than is the hand over it. KJ9 behind the overcaller is probably 2 tricks. In front of it, rarely more than 1 and sometimes none, if an example were needed.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari