mikeh, on 2021-December-05, 20:51, said:
Once in a while I have to rebid a poor suit if I can’t bid notrump due to the opps. That’s a negative
The alternative, in my view and experience is worse. 1D 1M 2C leaves responder in a terrible position with hands such as a 5=3=2=3 9 count. The 2C rebid could be minimum or just short of a gf jumpshift, so responder strains to keep the auction alive, and will commonly do this by bidding 2D. This is fine if opener is weak with 5=4, since it’s a 7 card fit, which is likely the best one can do. But if he can be 4=5, you can see that the end result is unlikely to be happy.
So I open 1D only with an inability to rebid 1N (including anticipating a 1M overcall) AND with a very good diamond suit and a weak club suit. AKQx Jxxxx is exaggerated but shows what I mean.
In my experience the main downside of opening 1♦ on xy45 with weak hands is that responder will often compete with only 3-card support (one of the upsides of unbalanced diamond) or bid higher than 'the law' with 4-card support. Also we might lose a 5-3 or even 5-4 club fit, similar to how we sometimes lose a 5-3 diamond fit if we open a 3=3=5=2 with 1♣.
I think on balance this is playable but not great. Weak xy45 hands are a seam in most methods, opening 1♣ and rebidding them is also not ideal, especially if the suit is weak.
mikeh, on 2021-December-06, 01:40, said:
It works well in a Walsh style approach, in which. 1D response denies a 4 card major unless diamonds are longer than the major and responder has a good hand. Some play that a ‘good hand’ means invitational or better: I prefer that responder has to have game values.
mikeh, on 2021-December-06, 01:40, said:
[...]
Bypassing a major in order to rebid 1N with a balanced minimum has enormous benefits and no discernible downsides.
mikeh, on 2021-December-06, 01:40, said:
However, I’d advise against opening 1C on a singleton, so for me ‘short club’ should be 2+ and I wouldn’t do it if we bid up the line.
- Balanced minima are just awful in competition, to the extent it is beneficial to rule them out as soon as possible. Weak NT bidders have a significant advantage here, but balanced club in a strong NT system approximates the same approach. If most balanced minimum hands open 1♣ regardless of minor suit holding you can compete freely if partner opens 1♦ (showing, for example, 5+ or 4=4=4=1), at the cost of having to cater to the dreaded balanced minimum if the opponents compete over 1♣. But the high frequency of a balanced minimum in 1♣ is also something of an upside. It makes splitting rebids into "balanced minimum" and "other" worthwhile (incidentally, this is exactly what happens if you bypass a major suit to show a balanced minimum).
- Using 1♣ as the dumping ground for balanced minima instead of 1♦ saves one valuable step, which allows for systems such as Transfer Walsh or Dutch Doubleton. In fact, in a vacuum we would prefer to open 1♣ significantly more often than 1♦ (I think the theoretically best value is something like 40% more?) to make optimal use of our bidding space. However, this is only true if the opponents are silent.
AL78, on 2021-December-06, 03:07, said: