jodepp, on 2015-March-16, 13:01, said:
As an aside, I confess to smirking when a player says something like 'If you had opened 1♦ like you're supposed to, you wouldn't be in this pickle'. What to open with 4=4 in the minors has been debated at length over the years (see Kantar and Roth's discussion on the merits of both choices). Even if I had opened 1♦ it's hardly clear to bid 4♣ now (I think I'd still Pass).
Who are you smirking at? Seems most likely to be me, but that requires that you have limited comprehension skills, since when I criticized the opening bid, I was careful to note that had we opened 1
♦, we'd still be in a difficult position.
As for what Roth and Kantar, and others, have written 40-50 years ago: I have news for you. Nobody plays the methods which formed the context of their discussion.
IIRC, one of the major arguments for the 1
♣ school was that opening 1
♣ allowed for a 1
♦ response, and the partnership would find its minor suit fit regardless of which minor it was, while opening 1
♦ would sometimes lead to never finding the club fit.
That era was remarkable for a number of factors that don't exist or aren't common anymore.
Back in the 1960s and early 1970s the requirements for overcalls were more stringent that now. I am not sure how many people here have access to old bridge records, but I have Bridge World magazines from the late 1930s until I cancelled my subscription a few years ago. World Championships and other high level tournaments featured far fewer competitive auctions back then than nowadays. The main weakness of opening 1
♣ on 4-4 minors is that competition can create nightmare scenarios...even worse than the OP one. When uncontested auctions were the norm, that problem wasn't very big...and if the opps did compete, they had real values anyway.
The development of aggressive competition in bidding undercut what was the single most widely presented argument (back then) for the 1
♣ choice: that it allowed for responder to bid diamonds, finding the fit at the 1-level, while opening 1
♦ made it difficult to find the 4-4 club fit. Once opps started routinely overcalling on 5 card majors with 7-8 hcp, this argument lost a lot of steam (and the invention of the weak jump overcall happened a little earlier, but weak jump overcalls didn't become generally accepted until well into the 60's).
At the same time, almost everyone was a strict up-the-line bidder. Only in the mid to late 1960s did some radical players suggest that one should bypass the 1
♦ response in order to show a 4 card major. There are still many players who would respond 1
♦ with 4=4 in a major and diamonds, but this is hardly universal anymore, as it was when Kantar and Roth (and others) had their discussions. So even with an uncontested auction, responder will often bypass diamonds, negating the finding of the suit at the 1-level, which had been a main element of the 1
♣ approach.
I tend to smirk when I find people advancing arguments based on appeals to authority rather than reasoning, and
a fortiori when those appeals cite authorities out of context
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari