Zelandakh, on 2014-August-26, 03:12, said:
I think the distinction is really quite important, especially given the limited bidding space available. When I look at Mike's examples they are generally what I would think of as 18 counts including upgrades. Coming from an Acol background the norm for a reverse is for me a 16 count and you often enough see the Brits willing to reverse on good 15 counts here. And these decisions have knock-on effects for the 1X - 1Y; 2X and 3X rebids.
In addition, for this sequence (1♣ - 1M; 2♦) it is not uncommon to use 2♦ conventionally, including some additional hands beyond the normal reverse, since the extra space makes this an appealing solution. So this is also the sequence where reversing light seems to me to have the most going for it when 2♦ is strictly natural. So I think style is really a major factor and my impression is that it is often the deciding factor in many of these threads on BBF.
mikeh, on 2014-August-26, 11:20, said:
Part of the problem of putting one's thoughts into writing is that, on occasion, they will become almost permanent. I didn't write my post on reverses intending that it would be pinned. I wrote it in March 2007!
I have played and thought about this game for more than 40 years now, and my approach has rarely stayed exactly the same for any great stretch of time. Thus I now reverse somewhat lighter than I did at the time of my reverse primer post.
I am still not what one might call a 'light' reverser, but I am definitely more flexible than I used to be.
Having said that, I really believe, strongly, that hand pattern and, critically, honour location are factors that don't get the attention, from most players, that they deserve.
A stiff Ace is NOT a desirable feature.
I cited x AKx Qxxx AKxxx as a more problematic hand than the actual hand, but that was only because I can open 1N with the stiff Ace without feeling that I have made a huge distortion. The second hand, with x AKx in the majors, is actually a stronger hand than the OP, because of the honour location. However, opposite a 1♠ response, I really don't feel that the hand and the suit textures are quite good enough to reverse, even with the lighter approach I now use. Make it x AKx Q10xx AK108x and I would probably hold my nose and reverse, hating it all the way.
Take away those spots, and I feel that 1♣ then 2♣ is the least distortion available.
I think modern standard natural bidding is simply flawed.
Why should a reverse require more strength in high card values than a strong notrump opening?
Sure that is convenient when you do have these values, but the truth is it simply leaves a big hole in your system, because such hands are quite frequent.
I would switch immediately to 16-18 notrump openings if balanced hands with 15 HCP would never occur.
Why people have lowered their strong notrump ranges but at the same time tightened the requirements for reverses escapes me.
Sure reversing the order of your suit bids require some extra strength and the reverse should be forcing in case opener has more values, but there is plenty of bidding room left to sort things out if opener has at least 15 HCP.
Some require more strength for a reverse than for a jump rebid of your opened suit, even though a reverse obviously consumes less bidding space.
Whatever the minimum strength of the reverse is, few play it as game forcing. So you will require methods thereafter to stop below game anyway.
This is much more a futile exercise in current bidding orthodoxy than in anything else.
I have never ever heard convincing arguments why the minimum values for a reverse has to be higher than the minimum values for a strong notrump.
The current requirements for a reverse seems to me an accepted dogma with a dubious rationale.
Of course I am not claiming that I resolve all problems by lowering the strength requirements of a reverse.
But I think the whole current concept of reverse is seriously flawed.
Modern bidding theorists usually agree on the principle that shape should come before strength.
Even without sophisticated methods I would rather show my shape and risk the very occasional condition getting too high than distorting my shape.
But if you simply align your minimum HCP requirement for your reverse to that of your strong notrump opening these problems disappear.
Rainer Herrmann