awm, on 2020-January-14, 02:49, said:
In general I don’t make non-forcing rebids of five card suits where I’ve already shown 4+ length. This does seem to be a difference between my style and some Acol and Polish Club players.
I play Polish Club but neither do I rebid 5 card suits, unless it is a very strong major and might be best even opposite a singleton. This is no question of what bidding system you play.
awm, on 2020-January-14, 10:26, said:
I’ve played negative freebids some (and against it more) and have noticed two big shortcomings:
1. You usually don’t really have a way to bid a five card suit. You have to either bid it as a six card suit and accept that you will play a lot of five-two fits at the game level and some five-one fits in partials... or treat it as a four card suit (typically negative double). Obviously this sometimes works out but not the majority of the time.
In a strong notrump context, opener will usually be 12-14 balanced or if unblanaced find another bid. But that is why it is important that the bid is constructive and the suit is good.
The alternative in standard to negative double and then show the suit a level higher thereafter (or miss game) is surely worse.
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2. You can’t really invite opposite a 12-14 range; you have to either make a negative free bid (which partner will always pass in this range unless he has a real fit) or game force. Again, sometimes 12-11 makes game and sometimes 14-11 doesn’t but I’d expect better results playing partials in the former and games in the latter.
I do not get this point. If I have a good suit and an invitational hand I need either a fit or extras with opener for game to be worthwhile. Of course there is room for judgement by opener. However, with no assurance of a real fit and a possible minimum I do not want to force him. So the above is exactly the reason why your argument is not a sign of weakness but of strength for NFB.
Rainer Herrmann