fourdad, on 2016-April-07, 04:47, said:
We had a thread a while back where which minor to open was discussed. At the time, I said it depends on whether you are strong enough to reverse.
This hand is an example of that and is why it should open 1D.
After the sequence....1D-1S-2S-P-3C-P-?, N now knows that partner has a minimum opener because he did NOT reverse.
N counts his pd as minimum (13) and values his hand as 17. Adds to game and under the "one who knows goes" tenet, N bids 5C.
If S has 15 he bids 6C. else pass.
Bippity boppity BOO!!
A couple of things. With 4-4, the issue of reversing is not critical. If the auction is uncontested then opening 1C and rebidding 2D not only shows the strength for a reverse it also shows five clubs. Of course some do not play this but most do. For evidence I quote from the pinned primer on reverses on the I/A forum:
Quote
It is a fundamental principle of bridge (outside of certain non-standard methods) that one bids long suits before short(er) suits. Any reverse absolutely, without any room for exception whatsoever, promises more length in the first suit than the second.
Now, as the saying goes, mikeh puts on his pants one leg at a time just like the rest of us, but really this is not at all some whimsy of his. The simple truth is that if you bid 1C and then, after partner responds 1M in a non-contested auction, if you bid 2D most partners will expect you to have five clubs. This view will be supported by the expert community, by non-expert me, and by everyone I know.
I regard it as at least an unsettled matter as to whether, after 1C-(1S)-X-(P) whether 2D must still show five clubs. Partner made this negative double, you have to do something, so? Actually this is why I prefer to open 1D on, say, a 3=2=4=4 hand minimum hand. I hope the auction will go 1D-1M-1NT but if the opponents come in with a spade and partner makes a negative double I can rebid 2C and hopefully we land on our feet.
Now on the current hand with the club opening of resonse #3, after 1C-(1S)-2S-(P) the clear way to show a minimum is by bidding 3C. Since this is a nice simple passable bid, doing something else is not on a minimum. The hand here qualifies. We have a fit and a stiff, the hand has improved. So we encourage. Encouragement is not gf, it is just encouragement. So, 3H. It doesn't force to game and it doesn't show five clubs. It shows encouragement. After which 4C says "Thanks for the encouragement, I still have my limit raise but forget about the plus, so unless you can do this on your own, I am done". If this is what 4C means, and I think that it is, then doing something other than 4C is return encouragement. Now the problem is to stay out of 6. Since 6 may or may not be on, it is natural to expect this to be a less than obvious choice. In response 3, OP clearly acknowledges that he should have done something other than 4C, and I agree with this.