awm, on Apr 19 2010, 06:42 PM, said:
TimG, on Apr 19 2010, 07:27 AM, said:
I believe that the "transfer" 1♦ is inherently harder to defend.
The reason is this: when opponents open in a suit showing only four cards there (especially with canape style etc) there is a strong possibility that my side's best contract is in the suit they showed. It is important for us to have methods which allow us to reach this contract when it comes up.
If opponents open 1♥ showing 4+ hearts (canape, etc) and my best suit is hearts, I can pass. Either the opponents will end up playing 1♥, which is usually a decent score for me (okay, occasionally if they are NV and I can make game in hearts I get a lousy score, but otherwise it's usually decent) or they will continue bidding, which means I get another chance to introduce my hearts naturally later. Thus I do not need any direct bid which "shows hearts" and can use the same types of methods I might use against 1♥ showing 5+ hearts without a big problem.
However, if opponents open 1♦ showing 4+ hearts (canape, etc) and my best suit is hearts, I have a problem. If I pass, the opponents might end up playing 1♦. They might even have a good fit there, and now I have sold to 1♦ when I can make a heart contract. So there is some need for me to act directly when I have hearts, which takes away some of the sequences I might otherwise use to my advantage (i.e. "cuebids" in competition might have to be natural etc). There is a bit of a difference here.
Again, if the bid shows constructive values I'm inclined to allow it... but I think that very weak "natural bids" are not so hard to defend, whereas very weak "non-forcing transfer bids" are a bit more difficult.
I disagree with your point of view. Basically you claim it's harder to defend, just because you can't let them play 1♥. However, if they open 1♦ and pass you can let them play 1♦...
Plus you get an extra call. You say that if they open a 4 card suit you might well belong in that suit. Well, here's your chance! You can just overcall your good 5 card suit naturally, so you'll play in that suit if you belong in it. After a natural 1♥ opening you can hardly play in ♥ ever.
You get some, you lose some, that's all. Just because you can't do everything you normally can, doesn't make it harder to defend. You just have other possibilities. Compare this with weak vs strong NT: which one do you want to disallow? The strong one because you can't penalty double, or the weak one because you can't show as many hand types?
I must admit that a 1♠ opening showing ♦ is more difficult, because you have less options as a defender, and opps will land in a good spot most of the time. But you have even fewer options if opps open 2♦ with the single suiter, and 2NT with 54+m...

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