Walddk, on Oct 23 2005, 01:43 AM, said:
If 2♠ promises another bid, thereby driving you to game most of the times, you will get to a no play game more often than not in my opinion. Here is just one example:
KQJxx
Axx
xx
xxx
Axxx
Qx
Qxx
AQxx
1♣ (2♦) 2♠
I suppose we agree that opener must support to 3♠. Now, according to mikeh responder raises to game because he promised another bid. I even gave opener a goodish minimum, and yet you will go down in 4♠ even on the most favourable lie of the cards.
I find this unsound.
Roland
I apologize for two reasons: the first is the delay in posting my response to Roland, and the second is that my first post was incomplete.
I was earlier addressing the question posed by the thread and in the interests of brevity (my posts tend to be long enough), I did not address the one exception to the '2
♠ promises a rebid'. For me, 2
♠ promises a rebid with only one exception: if opener raises
♠, he has several ways to do so.
4
♠ shows a hand that would accept opposite 10+ hcp, but denies any slam interest. Splinters are also available. A cue-bid is initially ambiguous (altho nowhere near as murky as 'standard' methods), and may be the beginning of a strong
♠ raise.
This leaves 3
♠ as non-forcing: indeed, it is sometimes a bid of desperation.
So Roland, your example would not actually find me in game: it would find me in 3
♠. That is not to say that playing 2
♠ promises a rebid is a walk in the park, for the reasons set out by all of the posters. Every approach comes with a cost. For me, my subjective experience suggests that my method is sufficiently useful on game/slam hands that it offsets the admitted (but in my view infrequent) cost of being a level too high.
It may be that my experience is tempered by the fact that I play a lot of weak notrump: typically 11-14 1st and 2nd, any vul, or in another serious partnership, 11-13 1st and 2nd, white. This does add some meat to the 2N rebid by opener. But I also play the same style with 15-17.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari