Trinidad, on 2013-June-27, 09:04, said:
That's certainly true, but that is not the relevant question. The relevant question is: "What does 2♠ mean when -absent agreement- partner bids it?". The only explanation (other than "partner forgot" or "he is nuts") is "good hearts and something in spades". And absent agreements "something in spades" means values or length.
And -just for the record- you do not need to have agreements on everything. Some things just follow from bridge logic. This is one of them. If I would play natural sign-offs with a good partner without further agreements, I would bid 2♠ with a hand with good hearts and secondary spades. And I would expect a good partner to understand that.
I have seen players bid like that too, but only while they were still in the bridge course. I have never seen anyone do that at the club level or higher.
Rik
And -just for the record- you do not need to have agreements on everything. Some things just follow from bridge logic. This is one of them. If I would play natural sign-offs with a good partner without further agreements, I would bid 2♠ with a hand with good hearts and secondary spades. And I would expect a good partner to understand that.
I have seen players bid like that too, but only while they were still in the bridge course. I have never seen anyone do that at the club level or higher.
Rik
I've seen a player with an open olympiad silver medal bid like that.
If you come from some backgrounds, you bid suits you've got and don't bid suits you haven't got. With a fit for partner, you raise.