masonbarge, on 2015-March-12, 11:47, said:
I would never rebid a minor with a six-card major suit, unless I had enough strength to jump with a 6-5. Two clubs is not forcing and for the reasons stated above, I will expect partner to pass with four-card minor support and two of my major. Therefore, rebidding a six-card major when I'm not in a game-seeking sequence is nearly mandatory.
When I started learning Bridge, it was with ACOL. Then you opened 4-card majors, and your second bid in a minor suit would make it 5 cards in the major. If you had 6-4, you planned to rebid the major again in the third round.
After changing to opening 5-card majors not so long ago, I found there are two schools about bidding 6-4 hands (M+m). Some rebid the major immediately while others plan the ACOL style showing 5-4 first. I have followed the 5-4 school for quite a while for the reason that 54xx shows 9 cards of your hand while 6xxx only shows 6 cards, so bidding 5-4 describes your hand better. More recently I have come to doubt that last half-sentence. I see a number of reasons for bidding the 6-card major first.
- If you show 5-4, your partner will assume you want to play a NT contract but with 6-4 you want to play your suit. So you are suggesting the wrong contract.
- Partner will often have doubleton support because singletons and, particularly, voids are quite rare.
- The probability of exactly 5-4 in the longest two suits is 24.75 %, 6-4 has 6.03 %, 6-3 has 9.09 %. That means even if you agree that the rebid in a minor can include a 6-4 hand, you partner will assume that you haven't got one because it is unlikely (1:6). So you are suggesting the wrong information.
- Rebidding your major limits your strength within a more or less narrow limit, bidding a minor hardly does. This makes a rebid of the major actually quite a good - and particularly useful - description of the hand while
- bidding the minor can create follow-up problems as we have seen in the contributions to this topic.
That is to say, I agree with you but I haven't always followed that style.