jillybean, on 2022-March-24, 17:57, said:
Yes, this is how we would treat a 2542 type hand when partner does not want to bid NT (this may be the problem).
2
♦. xyz/4th suit, game forcing
2
♣ xyz. If 2
♣ was available, natural, we wouldn't chose it.
Pass ?
1nt - convince me why this is a good bid, I have few entries to partners hand, and have sympathy for the 2
♥ bid.
How many hearts is partner likely to have when he bids 1S, having opened 1C?
Even if your style is to never bypass 1S with 4 spades, which is definitely the dominant style for most, and still has some following even in the expert world, he will rarely have 3 and never 4.
He’ll rarely have three partly because he’ll often have 8 or more black cards…he has to be specifically 4333 to hold only 7 blacks and have 3 hearts. I can’t give you a probability of his shape but I am confident that he is more likely to have two than three….bearing in mind that some 3 card holdings raise 1H to 2H….for example, with say Qxxx Kxx x AJxxx the vast majority of reasonably good players bid 2H rather than 1S.
Give him a better hand: say AJxx Kxx x AQxxx he rebids 1S and over 1N by you he bids 2H!
This latter point is, of course, an argument in favour of rebidding 1N: most times when you belong in 2H you will get there after bidding 1N.
Note that if he does have the decent to good 4315 hand, intending to bid 2H over 1N, he should raise your 2H rebid to 3H! And sometimes 4! AKxx Kxx x AQxxx should definitely bid 4H over 2H.
Meanwhile bear in mind that even die-hard up the line bidders sometimes hold distributional hands….where it’s not that they don’t have three hearts…or two…they may hold one or even none!
Also, and a minor factor since not everyone would bid it this way and it’s a rare holding, how would you bid, as opener, with say KQxx void AQxx AJxxx?
I’d seriously consider 1C 1H 1S 1N 2D!
At the risk of repeating myself, another strong argument against 2H is that 2H should be a constructive bid. There is or should be in any coherent method a hand type that is wrong for a WJS, because it’s too strong, but also wrong for either 2C (starting an invitational sequence) or 2D (starting a forcing sequence)
Give me xx AQJxxx Qxx xx.
It’s absurd to treat this as one would xx KQ109xx xxx xx, which looks like a wjs to me. If you jump to 2H on both, opener will either get too high on the latter or go too low on the former far, far too often.
It’s also silly to treat the first hand as invitational after opener rebids 1S….I might invite if feeling aggressive and having seen a 1N rebid (although I think it losing bridge at mps because not only is 4H often failing, but also 3H might fail when he rejects….Kxx xx Kxx AQxxx can easily lose 5 or even 6 tricks even with 3-2 trump)
So if using weak jumpshifts and xyz you need a way to show the first hand type and thus is done by bidding 1H then, over 1S or 2C, bidding 2H.
Btw, if you decide to use 1C 1R 1S as promising 9+ black cards, don’t use xyz….responder needs to be able to get out in 2C with, say, xxx KQxx xxx Qxx.
All of this are reasons why 2H ought not to be ‘weak with 5H’
Of course, you have two arguments for your preference for 2H on that hand, and perhaps your main argument is not that you like 2H but that you hate 1N more!
1N is an ugly bid. It’s not, imo, nearly as ugly as 2H, but it’s definitely not a thing if beauty.
Let me begin by stating what every bridge player knows or should know: there is NO bidding system or style that NEVER requires one to make an ugly call. Some hands are like that. We suck it up and make the systemic bid not because we like it but because the system dictates it.
If, and I suggest it really should, 2H is defined as ‘constructive with 6+ hearts’ (bear in mind that such hands exist and need to be described) and we lack the shape needed to pass 1S or take a club preference then system dictates 1N.
Consider this: you hold x xx Qxxxx AJxxx. Partner opens 1S.
Now assume you’re playing 2/1. You bid 1N and partner rebids 2H.
This is a truly ugly hand. You have no good choices…none. Pass and he might be 6=4 in the majors. Bid 2S and he might be 5=5.
Bid 2N, showing at least a king more than you have, and he may raise with 14.
And so on.
So you have to accept that sometimes you’re likely heading for a minus. You make your call not because it’s good but because it’s (you hope) the least bad. On the 1255 nightmare I bid 2S. I hate it but maybe he has 6 spades or maybe he has 5404/5440 shape or a near jumpshift with 5431/5413 and can bid 3m next time. Passing is too committal, 2N a huge overbid/misdescription and 3C/d silly.
Here 1N isn’t good but it preserves chances. He may bid 2C with 6 clubs. He may bid 2H with a good 4315. He may well have 4135 and now not only may we get some diamond winners but we avoid a truly appalling heart contract.
If he passes 1N…I don’t like our chances but I have a very difficult time imagining that 2H will play two tricks better than 1N.
I hope this helps.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari