straube, on 2013-January-03, 10:30, said:
Looked at a few hands and not wild about this. I miss the diamond overcalls. How about...
dbl-takeout shape, could be as light as 8 hcps
1D-natural, expect 4-cd suits more often than 4M overcalls
1M-natural
1N-15-17
2C-strong hand (18+ or so)
.....2D-asking
.....2M-natural
.....2N-natural 18-20 or so
2D-weak two or perhaps Michaels
2M-weak two
What I like about this is that dbl is always takeout shape. It is not confused with other strong meanings. It is also very frequent...much more so than the strong meanings. If the dbl hand bids again, he shows extra and is further clarifying his shape.
Yeah, not comfortable with the 18-20 2N. Looking for workarounds.
At the takeout point, what you seem to be doing is saving the strong balanced 1NT overcall and then splitting the takeouts between a wide-ranging double (8-17 HCP) and a power 2
♣ cuebid (any shape), with apparently a forfeit of the jump overcall in diamonds for a Flannery-esque 2
♦.
This seems like a lot of the same problems with the Overcall Structure that I noticed earlier, but worse.
If you get past the inability to drop the quick description of the balanced intermediatre (15-17) and trust this to be worked out, especially after a 1
♣ opening with Herbert Negs (the easiest auctio by far), you should notice some principles.
1A. The 8-17 range is unwieldy. Sure, it is "safer" when you have the light range, but you are prone to interference by the opponents when you have intermediate or strong hands.
1B. Split ranges are mnore easily handled. RUNT offers that, especially the Son-of-RUNT version. X = 0-4 (could skip that one) or 11-18 or 23+; 1NT = 5-10 or 19-22. These ranges could be tweaked, obviously, to maybe 1NT = 8-11 or 17-19, X = 12-16 or 20+ (or 0-4?). But, split-ranging is less prone to opposition meddling.
2. While a weaker 1NT takeout seems more dangerous in the sense of possible penalties, it is also more powerful in its impact on the opposition. The net effect is that the 1NT overcall has a tendency to be penalized less than you might think. When you steal opposition space, they need that double for constructive purposes; with less space stealing, the oppositiuon can dedicate an asset to penalty doubling more easily. Consider, for example, how many play negative doubles after 1NT-(3x)-? but penalty after 1NT-(2x)-? Or, a penalty double in a 1x-(2y)-2x-(3y)-? unless "y" is one under "x." Thus, bidding higher is often safer than bidding lower, if that makes any sense. (Another example might be that a trap pass of a two-level overcall is easy, but you get nervous trap passing a three-level overcall.)
"Gibberish in, gibberish out. A trial judge, three sets of lawyers, and now three appellate judges cannot agree on what this law means. And we ask police officers, prosecutors, defense lawyers, and citizens to enforce or abide by it? The legislature continues to write unreadable statutes. Gibberish should not be enforced as law."
-P.J. Painter.