NickRW, on Jul 24 2010, 04:25 PM, said:
bluejak, on Jul 24 2010, 11:33 AM, said:
NickRW, on Jul 23 2010, 03:35 PM, said:
Oh, no. That is definitely untrue. When Precision was invented players believed much more that points were necessary for strong openings. At that time, Precision players had 16 points for 1♣. It is a new idea to open distributional hands with strong artificial openings.
What does the sequence 1♥ 1NT 3♥ show in Precision? Simple: a hand that these days players want to open 1♣.
Not as I recall it. Some of you perhaps have the benefit of a copy of the old books - I gave my Reese book on Precision to a former partner - but I seem to clearly recall a couple of examples that were powerful rule of 24 hands that he did recommend be included in 1♣.
I am afraid your memory is faulty. I repeat below the results of my research from several months ago.
In Precision Bidding for Everyone (Goren & Wei), it is explained that the correct opening bid is 1♦ on:
♠AQ ♥none ♦KJ1095 ♣ KQ10973
Quote
So in original Precision, it seems that there are no upgrades for distribution or exceptional intermediates!
In Precision Bidding and Precision Play, Terence Reese is slightly less strict. Although he explains that it would be a mistake to open 1♣ on:
♠5 ♥AK10974 ♦KQJ86 ♣4
he goes on to say that:
Terence Reese said:
♠AQJ10852 ♥none ♦AK84 ♣62.
Here you have three first round controls and will not be carried into space by a partner who may also have a good hand.
Interestingly, Reese's exceptional hand both conforms with the Rule of 25 and contains eight "clear cut tricks", whilst the hand on which it would be a "mistake" to open 1♣ does not meet either of those criteria.
In "either or" 1♣ systems such Carrot/Swedish Club and Polish Club then the traditional minimum strength for the strong option is 17, 18+ or 19+HCP so the EBU's 16+ minimum does allow slack for judgement upgrades when playing the traditional versions of these system.