Posted 2009-July-10, 16:37
Many years ago, I had a long discussion with a national TD regarding this very issue. The decision was that a 2M opening as intermediate with 5+ of the major and 4+ of a minor is a convention and not allowed. However, a call that showed 5+ of a major, not both majors, and unbalanced was a treatment and allowed.
However, when we discussed further, that the major would not be longer than 6, the obvious 6331 was seen as the obvious only case when the call did not show precisely 5+M/4+minor. That was deemed enough, but poor tactics.
So, we decided instead, as a partnership, that 2M was allowed to be bid with a one-suiter, just like Precision, to get around the rule and to achieve fairness (in our view). However, the caveat was that the one-suiter must be 7-card, usually. Hence, 2M showed unbalanced with 5-6 cards, or 7+ and one-suited. This was deemed OK, as a "parallel" to precision, especially as 6331 hands were deemed "optional."
This was not the end of the world, as an occasional 2M opening with 7+ in the major was easy enough to correct, as a 2M-P-3♣-P-3M, for example. We made a point of doing this a few times and saving the convention card, results, and hand records, as proof for later (if needed).
Of course, all of this is utterly stupid, as 5+ in the major with the treatment being a four-card minor also is not a convention buit a treatment anyway. Stupid GCC.
"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.