pilowsky, on 2020-October-24, 20:45, said:
♥Q led for 3D+1. 26 other people were in 1♥ pass pass pass
Not getting what the point is. Neither if it qualifies as an « interesting bridge hand » (where does the interest lie in?).
Bidding 1NT is (as others said more or less clearly) wrong. The hand is much stronger and doesn’t have any pressure in ensuring playing the hand. Were I to make a bad bid, I’d chose 2NT. Surprising, though, that W acts over a strong NT but not over a mundane 1H opening if that gets passed out.
Anyway, as just proven here, being wrong doesn’t mean it will always lose. Sometimes it will work, but statistically not often enough to make it the right call. Some other call(s) will work better over time. Bridge is a probabilistic game with imperfect information (the hidden hands), and that is also what makes the spice of the game.
Last time I made a 4SF at 2D after partner had opened and I had 20 HCPs. The issue was partner had opened 1D (I was distracted) and passed my « surprising » 4SF that looked like a kind of forced preference. He ended up 2D+4 after a misdefence when all the other tables were at 6NT-1. I actually apologized to the opps and would never claim 2D was a good bid or was a « thinkable » bid. Just a mix of cartons between the bidding box and my brain.
The only thing I can think of is if you desperately need big IMP swings or tops to qualify. Then can you make anti-percentage calls, as if it works it is good for your rating, and if it loses (as you would expect more likely than not) you were still out had you played normally. Examples: finessing a Q with 9 cards, aggressively upgrading hands or overcalling, bidding slams with 4 KC and no Q in a 8-cd fit, going after games on 2 finesses...
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I rank
1. 1♥ = NAT. Goldilocks would approve.
2. 2NT = NAT. Misdescription and overbid. If you swop your Ms and ms, you might consider this.
3. 1N = NAT. Misdescription and underbid. Inferior to 2N because robots respond conservatively.
3. 1♣ = Ψ Mastermind. GIB is tolerant of such gambits but they infuriate and alienate human partners.