akhare, on Oct 21 2009, 07:53 PM, said:
straube, on Oct 21 2009, 01:44 PM, said:
Thanks. That seems very playable and has the advantage of responder being able to show 5 hearts and only constructive values. I think I still like 1N with constructive/ GF and 2C GF relay; seems like using 1S-2L for constructive hands gives too much space for constructive hands and too little for GI+ hands.
Playing 2L responses as SAYC style (GI), but with almost no slam interest might work too.
Basically, most hands with serious slam interest bid 1N (but it could very well be a weak hand that wants to sign off). It may not allow responder to sign off at the 2 level with a weak single red suited hand, but are those really that frequent?
First, I think you'd do better to have your 2L bids be GI only. Something like...
1S-2C=semi-balanced or clubs
1S-2D=six diamonds
1S-2H=six hearts
1S-2S=simple raise
Maybe something better is possible. The point is that it would give opener the option to pass, introduce a second suit at the 2-level or force game with 2N or higher.
As far as 1N being less than or better than GI, I still think this overloads the bid and you'll have trouble sometimes sorting it out.
One problem is that opener's rebids may not be able to be organized efficiently. For instance, if 1N were GF, then a 2C rebid could show a side club suit or a single-suited spade hand. If 1N can be weak or strong, then opener's 2C rebid might just have to show clubs.
This isn't a huge problem for 1S. After 1S-1N, 2H-2N is the relay bid and you have almost enough room. After 1S-1N, 2S-2N is the relay bid and again you have probably enough.
I bet it's harder for 1H. 1H-1N, ? with limited 4-5-3-1? I bet you don't have nearly enough room to relay this out after say 1H-1N, 2D-2S. After 1H-1N, opener is even more constrained by not knowing whether a GF is in the offing; knowing right away allows him to make better use of space.
I think your right about the frequency of responder having a six-card red suit that he needs to show, but it happens often enough that I'd want to know why I was giving it up.
The other issue is what happens in competition. It's really nice to establish a GF because it adds meaning to passing, doubling, and further bidding. I mean, there's a big difference between 1S P 1N 3D P P 3H depending on the meaning of 1N. I'm sure one could cite examples where interference was dealt with handily, but I bet there are more where interference causes a problem.
I still think the ideal response structure is
1S-1N semiforcing
1S-2C GF relay
1S-2D hearts
1S-2H good spade raise
It's what Sabine Zenkel plays (though her 1N is probably forcing).