barmar, on 2013-March-07, 12:36, said:
Had one come up last week. I was playing with an infrequent partner (so we have little in the way of partnership experience). I opened, LHO made an insufficient overcall. After we called the director and he gave her the options, she chose to accept the IB and then jumped to game. If the auction had gone normally, I'd have treated the jump as weak/preemptive. But I assumed that since she chose to accept the IB, she had some other meaning in mind, and made some kind of slam try. But no, that wasn't what she was doing, she had the weak hand. I guess she figured that she was going to bid 4 anyway, so it didn't matter whether the overcall was sufficient or not.
And now that I think about it, this is probably right. If she wanted to show a good hand, she should allow the IB and then make a cue bid -- it would allow her to cue one level lower, giving us more room to describe our hands.
1M (1m) ? Accept and then bid 3m for mixed raise? Accept and then bid 3M for weak raise (even if it would be L.R. with interference)? All kinds of things to consider for next time.
And if we screw it up, we can try L23