DavidKok, on 2023-May-08, 04:31, said:
I'd double on the first hand (but it's close) but not the other two. I'd much rather have aces and kings than all these queens, and I would also prefer to have values outside partner's length (where the slow values are less likely to get ruffed). The ♣Q isn't just wasted, it is worth negative points (because it means partner's values in the other suits won't be supported by our values, and the opponents likely have some compensation for bidding with a weaker suit).
At IMPs I wouldn't double in any of the three scenarios.
As an aside I think 'third seat openings can be weaker' is really not all it's cracked up to be. Half the time you put partner, not the opponents, in an uncomfortable spot with a (say) 8-11 count and no real clue what to do. Even Drury can't fix everything. If you want to stretch in third seat I'd recommend discussing the responses with a maximum passed hand in detail, especially in competition.
In my regular partnerships we open almost all 11 counts in first or second seat and many 10 counts if with a 5 card major…and in one, we open 10-13 1N nv.
This has a number of effects.
One is that third seat needn’t stretch too much to open, since partner is limited (we still open the same style in third seat)
Second is that responder won’t often be caught with your problem hand of 10-11 hcp, since he’d likely have opened.
Third is that you (on balance) create problems for the opps in terms of their constructive bidding. Virtually all partnerships have better methods in uncontested auctions than they have after an opp opens
Fourth is that responder, after a first or second seat opening, can’t force to game on random, mis-fitting 13 counts, unless it’s a good 13 count.
Fifth is that, if the opps do own the hand and win the auction, our bidding makes it easier for them to play the hand. So light openings do have sometimes significant downsides.
As for drury…there’s drury and then there’s drury. Standard drury is a bit like standard jacoby 2N over 1M. It’s better than nothing but it’s not very good. Most serious partnerships will use something better. In my main partnership we have multiple pages of notes for both our forcing major suit raise and drury…plus notes on responder’s actions with values but no fit.
What does P (P) 1S (P) 2N mean, as one example. Playing it as a no-fit balanced 10-11 count is horrendous but I suspect many players don’t have a better idea (I think it can usefully be played either as both minors, 5-5 or better, or a single minor where opener can bid 3C pass or correct or 3D, saying he loves clubs, or some other bid with unusual or strong hands).
Sorry to go off topic but I thought your points were well made for most, while wanting to suggest that it’s possible to avoid/minimize these issues in a regular partnership.
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari