xcurt, on Apr 19 2009, 10:41 PM, said:
2♦ is insane. Even if it's better than 1NT, it's only going to be marginally better (-50 or +90 vs -90, or +90 vs +50). It could be a lot worse. 2♠ on the other hand, at least offers the possibility of +110 covering most of the other possible scores out there.
I'm not particularly happy about 2♠, but, having lost the race to 1NT at none vul, we're likely headed for a bad score... unless having the right to make the opening lead helps us, there's no plausible number of tricks where we do better than we would if we declared 1NT. Since partner is a favorite to lead a spade from a broken sequence, also extracting one of our precious spades for leading through declarer, I'll take my chances bidding 2♠, confidently and in tempo.
What I don't get is how 2
♦ could be worse than 2
♠, seeing as 2
♦ at this point shows a diamonds suit that could not be bid earlier and spade tolerance.
I mean, 2
♠ commits us to 2
♠. 2
♦ allows us to play in 2
♠ but gives partner the ability to pass 2
♦ with support for diamonds. Options are always better than no options.
Josh should also consider what 2
♦ shows. I did not open a NV 2
♦. I did not bid 2
♦ after the double. I didn't even bid 1NT. Exactly how good are my diamonds supposed to be at this point? I mean, sure -- I'd like Hxxxx, but I'm kind of stuck, having passed when I should have bid 1NT.
"Gibberish in, gibberish out. A trial judge, three sets of lawyers, and now three appellate judges cannot agree on what this law means. And we ask police officers, prosecutors, defense lawyers, and citizens to enforce or abide by it? The legislature continues to write unreadable statutes. Gibberish should not be enforced as law."
-P.J. Painter.